Lex mercatoria

Lex mercatoria (from Latin for "merchant law"), often referred to as "the Law Merchant" in English, is the body of commercial law used by merchants throughout Europe during the medieval period. It evolved similar to English common law as a system of custom and best practice, which was enforced through a system of merchant courts along the main trade routes. It developed into an integrated body of law that was voluntarily produced, adjudicated and enforced on a voluntary basis, alleviating the friction stemming from the diverse backgrounds and local traditions of the participants. Due to the international background local state law was not always applicable and the merchant law provided a leveled framework to conduct transactions reducing the preliminary of a trusted second party.[1] It emphasized contractual freedom and inalienability of property, while shunning legal technicalities and deciding cases ex aequo et bono. With lex mercatoria professional merchants revitalized the almost nonexistent commercial activities in Europe, which had plummeted after the fall of the Roman Empire.[2]

In the last years new theories had changed the understanding of this medieval treatise considering it as proposal for legal reform or a document used for instructional purposes. These theories consider that the treatise cannot be described as a body of laws applicable in its time, but the desire of a legal scholar to improve and facilitate the litigation between merchants. The text is composed by 21 sections and an annex. The sections described procedural matters such as the presence of witnesses and the relation between this body of law and common law. It has been considered as a false statement to define this as a system exclusively based in custom, when there are structures and elements from the existent legal system, such as Ordinances and even concepts proper of the Romano-canonical procedure.[3] Other scholars have characterized the law merchant as a myth and a seventeenth-century construct.[4]

Common law development

We find reference to the law merchant as early as 13 Edw. 4 (1473/4): "'the king has jurisdiction over them [merchants] to put them to stand (estoyer) to right, etc., but this will be 'according to the laws of nature' (secundum legem naturae) which is called by some 'law merchant', which is universal law for everyone (tout le monde)."[5]

English courts applied merchant customs only if they were "certain" in nature, "consistent with law" and "in existence since time immemorial". English judges also required that merchant customs be proven before the court. But even as early as 1608, Chief Justice Edward Coke described lex mercatoria as "a part of the common law", and William Blackstone would later concur.[6] The tradition continued especially under Lord Mansfield, who is said to be the father of English commercial law. Precepts of the lex mercatoria were also kept alive through equity and the admiralty courts in maritime affairs. In the US, traditions of the lex mercatoria prevailed in the general principles and doctrines of commercial jurisprudence.

Lord Mansfield was a champion of fusing lex mercatoria with the common law.

Sir John Holt (Chief Justice 1689 to 1710) and Lord Mansfield (Chief Justice, 1756 to 1788) were the leading proponents of incorporating the lex mercatoria into the common law. Holt did not complete the task, possibly out of his own conservatism (see Clerke v Martin[7]) and it was Lord Mansfield that became known as the 'founder of the commercial law of this country" (Great Britain).[8] Whilst sitting in Guildhall, Lord Mansfield created,

a body of substantive commercial law, logical, just, modern in character and at the same time in harmony with the principles of the common law. It was due to Lord Mansfield's genius that the harmonisation of commercial custom and the common law was carried out with an almost complete understanding of the requirements of the commercial community, and the fundamental principles of the old law and that that marriage of idea proved acceptable to both merchants and lawyers.[9]

International Commercial Law and Arbitration

Lex mercatoria precepts have been reaffirmed in new international mercantile law. The new commercial law is grounded on commercial practice directed at market efficiency and privacy. Dispute resolution has also evolved, and functional methods like international commercial arbitration is now available. These developments have also attracted the interest of empirical sociology of law.[10]

Present and future commercial law

Lex mercatoria is sometimes used in international disputes between commercial entities. Most often those disputes are decided by arbitrators which sometimes are allowed (explicitly of implied) to apply lex mercatoria principles.[11]

See also

References

  1. Sealy and Hooley (2008) 14
  2. Johnson, David R.; Post, David (May 1996). "Law and Borders: The Rise of Law in Cyberspace". Stanford Law Review. 48 (5): 1367. doi:10.2307/1229390. JSTOR 1229390.
  3. Basil, Bestor, Coquillette and Donahue (1998). Lex Mercatoria and Legal Pluralism: A Late Thirteenth Century Treatise and Its Afterlife. Ames Foundation.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  4. Kadens, Emily (Winter 2015). "The Medieval Law Merchant: The Tyranny of a Construct". Journal of Legal Analysis. 7 (2): 251–289. doi:10.1093/jla/lav004.
  5. Pasch. 13 Edw. 4 pl. 5. https://www.bu.edu/phpbin/lawyearbooks/display.php?id=20338
  6. James Brown Scott, Law, the State, and the International Community, p. 259, Columbia University Press, (1939)
  7. (1702) 2 Ld. Raym. 757 ; 92 E.R. 6
  8. Lickbarrow v Mason (1787) 2 Term Rep 63, 73, Buller J
  9. CM Schmitthoff, 'International Business Law, A New Law Merchant' in Current Law and Social Problems (1961) 137
  10. cf. Volkmar Gessner/Ali Cem Budak, eds., Emerging Legal Certainty: Empirical Studies on the Globalization of Law. Ashgate: Dartmouth 1998
  11. Some examples of such arbitral awards: Collected by Trans-Lex.org

Bibliography

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