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Enforcement of foreign judgments, systemic calibration, and the global law market

  • Samuel P. Baumgartner und Christopher A. Whytock
Veröffentlicht/Copyright: 1. Februar 2022
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Abstract

There are important reasons for states to recognize and enforce the judgments of other states’ courts. There are also reasons that may militate against recognition or enforcement of certain foreign judgments, making it appropriate to calibrate or “fine tune” the presumption favoring recognition and enforcement so it is not applied too broadly. Most calibration principles, such as the principle that a judgment from a court lacking jurisdiction should not be recognized, are case-specific. However, one calibration principle that is, to our knowledge, unique to the law of the United States stands out: the principle of systemic calibration, according to which U.S. courts must not recognize or enforce foreign judgments “rendered under a system which does not provide impartial tribunals or procedures compatible with the requirements of due process of law.” In this Article, we aim to shed empirical light on how U.S.-style systemic calibration operates in practice. We find that state-of-origin indicator scores related to systemic adequacy are on average higher when U.S. courts recognize or enforce foreign judgments than when they refuse to do so. Moreover, the probability of recognition and enforcement increases as these indicator scores increase. However, in only six of the 587 opinions in our dataset did a court refuse recognition or enforcement based explicitly on the systemic inadequacy ground. Thus, while the level of systemic calibration in U.S. courts is high, it is mostly achieved implicitly. Finally, even judgments from states with low systemic adequacy scores are sometimes recognized or enforced by U.S. courts.


* Samuel P. Baumgartner is Professor of Law, University of Zurich Law School.

** Christopher A. Whytock is Vice Dean and Professor of Law and Political Science, University of California, Irvine School of Law; Associate Reporter, Restatement of the Law Third, Conflict of Laws; Member, U.S. State Department Advisory Committee on Private International Law. For valuable comments, the authors thank Kevin Davis, Christopher Drahozal, Celia Wasserstein Fassberg, Francesco Parisi, and Dan Klerman, as well as the editors of this journal. The authors also thank Alice Doyle for excellent research assistance. Cite as: Samuel P. Baumgartner & Christopher A. Whytock, Enforcement of Foreign Judgements, Systemic Calibration, and the Global Law Market, 23 Theoretical Inquiries L. 119 (2022).


Published Online: 2022-02-01
Published in Print: 2022-02-23

© 2022 by Theoretical Inquiries in Law

Heruntergeladen am 26.11.2025 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/til-2022-0006/pdf?lang=de
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