Conflict of Laws
Conflict of Laws
Conflict of Laws
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child also born of Filipino citizens in a State that follows the jus soli
principle may also have dual nationality. Marriage with an alien is
another possibility of acquiring dual citizenship.
It is a recognized principle of international law that each state
is free to determine under its own law who are its nationals. The Hague
Convention of 1930 on conflict of nationality laws provides that the
municipal law shall be recognized by other states insofar as it is
consistent with the international conventions, international customs, and
the principles of law generally recognized with regard to nationality.17
However, Article IV, section 5 of the 1986 Philippine
Constitution considers dual allegiance of citizens as inimical to the
national interest to be dealt with by law. To provide said law, the
following draft is suggested:
A Filipino citizen who is capab]e of having two or more citizenships
shall declare. upon reaching the age of majority, which should be
registered in the Civil Registry and the Commission on Immigration,
the citizenship he will follow. If he chooses Philippine citizenship. he
is deemed to have relinguished all other citizenship. If he chooses the
citizenship of any other state, he is deemed to have renounced his
Philippine citizenship.
The suggested draft implements Article IV section 4 of the
Philippine Constitution on dual allegiance and in accordance with the
rulings of the Supreme Court in Frivaldo v. Comelec .18
If an alien residing in the Philippines claims dual or multiple
nationalities for the exercise of his civil rights, the decision of the
International Court of Justice in the Nottebohm case enunciating the
principle of "effective nationality"19 should be foUowed.
A suggested draft is as follows:
For the detennination of the civil rights of an alien residing in the
Pllilippines, who ii: capable of claiming two or more nationalities, his
nationality is that one to wh.ich he is most attached to or closely
connected with.
In the Nottebohm case, a German national residing in
Guatemala, to avoid the seizure of his assets as enemy alien at the
outbreak of World War Il, applied for and was naturalized as citizen of
17Section 3, Hague Convention on Nationality.
111 74 SCRA 245 (1989).
19ICJ Rep. 1955.
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CONTRACTS
Article 17, paragraphs 1 and 2 state the universal rule of lex lod
celebrations governing the extrinsic requirements of contracts.
The third paragraph of Article 17 however should be a separate
provision as it concerns a different subject matter which falls under the
exceptions to the rule of comity. A more comprehensive provision in a
separate article is suggested as follows:
Prohibitive laws, concerning peJSOns, their aclS or property, and those
which have for their object national security, public safety, public
health and good customs, or if they might work injustice lO Filipino
nationals, shall not be rendered ineffective by laws or judgments
promulgated or by determinations or conventions agreed upon in a
foreign country.
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ADHESION CONTRACTS
The principle of adhesion contracts is now recognized and
applied in Philippine jurisprudence. Individuals usually enter into
ready made contracts unilaterally drafted by dominant parties like big
commercial firms. The weaker party usually has no opportunity to
bargain and simply gives his "confonne'" to the contract on a "take it or
leave it" basis. Some of the conditions, however, usually in fine print as
in insurance contracts, bills of lading, or airline tickets, are generally
advantageous to the party that drafted the contracts. If it is shown that
one of the parties was not fully aware of or did not fully comprehend the
significance ,f said provision the court may not give effect to it.
The Philippine Supreme Court and the Court of Appeals have
applied the adhesion contract doctrine in agreements where almost all
provisions have been drafted only by one party, usually a corporation,
and the only participation of the other party is in affixing his
signature.rt
CONTRACTS FOR INTERNATIONAL AIR
TRANSPORTATION
The Convention for the Unification of Certain Rules Relating to
International Carriage by an Airline adopted at Warsaw on 12 October
1929 was adhered to by the Philippines on 9 November 1950 and entered
into force in the Philippines on 7 February 1957.21
27Swect Lines v, Teves, 83 SCRA 368 (1978); Ong Yi v. CA, 915 SCRA 23 (1979);
Liamko v, PAL, 0.R. 80119-R. Dec. 8, 1980).
21Phil. Trelllies Index 1946-82. The Convenlion was amended by the Hague Protocol
on 28 Sept. 1955 and entered into force in the Philippines on 28 Feb. 1967; by the
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Montreal Agreement in 1966 the Guatemala Protocol in 1971. the Guatemala Protocol set
the limit to $100,000 per paragraph and Pl,000 per baggage.
29164 SCRA 268 (1988), citing Ong Yiu V, CA, 91 SCRA 223 (1979).
orlhwesl Airlines V. Cuenca, 145 SCRA 1065 (1986); Lopez v. PANAM, 16 SCRA
43 (1966).
31Air France v. Carrascoso, 18 SCRA 155 (1966).
3264 SCRA 610 (1975).
3>.zutueta v. PANAM. 43 SCRA 379 (1972).
34154 SCRA 311 (1987)
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Most major European states generally follow the lex lod delecti
rule to govern torts committed abroad. The French Civil Code provides
that the laws of a foreign locus delecti should determine the
consequences of tortuitous acts occuring there.37
Germany adheres to the principle that tort liability is governed
by the lex loci delecti although in varied forms. ArticJe 12 of the
German Code provides that "a tort committed abroad shall not entitle
the victim to claims against a German national in excess granted by
German law. The Article precludes claim against a German tort feasor
in excess of that permitted by German law. A decree issued in Germany
on 7 December 1942 which remains to be the law, states that claims for
extra-contractual damages based on an act or omission of a German
national committed abroad are governed by German law, in so far as a
German national has been damaged. The effect of the law is to require
the application of German law on German nationals irrespective of
where the tort was committed.
The Italian Civil Code (1942) provides: "Non contractual
obligations are governed by the law of the place where the facts from
which they arise took place."38
The Netherlands follow the rules set in the Benelux Draft
Convention on Private International Law which provides:
(1) The law of the country where a ton Lale.es place shall determine
whether this fact constitutes a wrongful acl, as well as the obligations
which result therefrom.
(2) However, if the consequences of a wrongful acl belong to the
legal sphere of a country other than the one where the act took place,
the obligations which result therefrom shall be determined by the law
by that other country.39
37Art. 1384. French Civil Code; Latour C. Giraud Cour de Cass Action, 25 May
1948, 38 Rev. Crit. DIP 89 (1949).
38ltalian Civil Code (1969), cf Morse, Choice of Law in Torts, a Comparative
S1D"Vey, 32 Am. J. of Comp. Law, 51 (1984).
39ArL 14. Translation from 18 Am. I. of Comp. L. 406 (1970).
4016 May 1955. 3 Ned. Tijal Vol.DR 290 (1956).
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In said case the plaintiff who was riding in the car belonging to
the defendant was injured in an accident caused by the defendant in
France. The Court of Appeals applied the Dutch law. While admitting
that the law of the place of the accident which is France was normally
applicable, the Hague court ruled that the French Jaw should be
displaced in cases where the consequences of the wrongful act properly
belonged to the legal sphere of another country. In said case both
parties were Dutch nationals who lived in the Netherlands, and the
agreement to travel was made in Netherlands, which was not limited to
the travel in France:41
The Portuguese Civil Code (1968) requires, in case of tortious
acts, application of the law of the state of the act. Article 45(1) applies
the law of principal activity.
Article 45(2) of the Portuguese Ovit Code applies where the act
and injury occur in different states. The Jaw extends protection to the
plaintiff of the law of the place of injury in cases of a foreseeable
accident. This rule specifically applies to cases of products liability.42
Where the tort feasor and victim have the same nationality or
the same habitual residence, the law of such common nationality or
common habitual residence shall apply if the parties happen to be in a
foreign country whose Jaw would normally be applicable.43
Article 10(9) of the Spanish Civil Code (1974) provides that:
Non-<:0ntractual obligations shall be governed by the law of lhe place
where the event from which they derive has occurred.
The provision does not include cases where the act or injury occur
in different countries.44
Austria follows the basic rule of le:.c loci delicti commissi as
provided in the statute on private international Jaw (1978). Lex loci
delicti is defined as the law of the place where the conduct which
causes the harm occurs. An exception to this rule is where the parties
have a stronger connection with the law of another state and where
41Digest of case taken from C.J. Mone, Choice of Law in Ton: A Comparative
Surver, 32 Am. J. of Comp. Law 51 (1984).
4"l(;f. Morse, op. cit. at 65.
43Art. 45(3) Portuguese Civil Code.
44Morse, op. cit., at 67.
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4SArt. 48.
46Anicle 129. Federal Law on Private International Law of Switzerland. cf, Morse,
at 70.
47An. 32(1).
48Article 32(2).
49Morse, op.cil., at 89.
S04Q L.J.Q.B.28; l.R.6Q.B.l .
51 Cited in Machado v. Fontes. (1897), 11 L.S.Q.B. 542; Q.B.231 (1987).
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113.
194
U.S.
1211 (1904).
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REVOCATION OF WILLS
The following provisions are proposed on the rule on revocation
of wills:
If a citizen of the Philippines revokes his will outside the Philippines,
either Philippine law or lhe Jaw of lbe counuy where the revocation is
made will govern.
An alien domiciled in the Philippines may revoke his will in
accordance with Philipp ine law, his national law, or the law of the
COlD'ltry where the revocation is made.
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