Civil Transactions Law
Civil Transactions Law
Civil Transactions Law
8 December 2013
CONTENTS
Introduction
Legislative Pragmatism
Is the new Law innovative?
Freedom of Contract
New Law will be of assistance
to commerce
Conclusion
Page 1
CIVIL TRANSACTIONS
LAW
Introduction
The Civil Transactions Law, enacted pursuant to Royal Decree 29 of 2013,
th
came into force in Oman on August 6 , 2013. It is concerned with the
rights and obligations of natural and juridical persons in four broad areas:
personal rights and obligations; contractual rights and obligations; rights in
rem (real estate); and personal guarantees and insurances in kind.
Legislative pragmatism:
Given that the new Law has been introduced at a time when the
commercial legal framework in the Sultanate is very well developed
(notably so among member states of the GCC), there was an imperative
need for existing statute law to be left undisturbed and this need is met
pragmatically, Article 1 stating:
This Law shall apply.to all matters covered by its provisions
other
than those regulated by specific other legislation. Where this Laws
provisions are silent on any matter, the court shall make its decision in
relation thereto in accordance with the established principles of Islamic
jurisprudence, failing which, the principles of Islamic shariah, failing
which, in accordance with custom
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Specific Performance:
Article 258 (1) of the new Law states that an obligor, following receipt
of notice to do so from the other party, shall be compelled to perform
his obligation specifically, but then adds that this compulsion applies
only where that is possible.
Article 258 (2) then further dilutes the possibility of compulsion, as far
as the court is concerned, by allowing the court to commute the
obligation to a liability to pay monetary damages in place of
compellable specific performance, where the latter would overstrain
the party bound or cause him to suffer serious [economic] damage.
Indemnities:
Article 181 states that the quantum of compensation or damages on
termination of a contract where restitution is not possible shall in all
cases be the extent of the injury suffered by the injured party together
with his loss of profit provided such loss was a natural consequence of
the [liable partys default].
It needs to be emphasized that this (by virtue of Article 1) will not
restrict a lending banks entitlement to charge default interest at the
maximum rate (without sanction of the court) permitted for commercial
customers under pre existing law and regulations.
One shortcoming of the new Law is that it does not address in this area
the status of liquidated damages clauses. This evidently will remain a
matter for expert testimony in any court proceedings to establish that
the clause captures a reasonable estimate of the claimants loss,
based on principles of fairness as before.
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Force Majeure:
Force majeure (greater force), the occurrence of events of which may
relieve a party to a contract from his obligations, is dealt with at various
points in the new Law. Article 172 (1) sets out the basic position when
it states:
.if an event of force majeure supervenes so as to render
performance of [all] contractual obligations impossible, then such
obligations shall cease to be binding and the contract shall
automatically terminate
Freedom of Contract:
There has been some concern that the new Laws prescriptive
measures may impact on, or somehow restrict, the freedom of contract
in commercial transactions for which Oman had previously been well
known. But this is unfounded. In the past, contracting parties could
agree terms that would stand as written in the absence of Omani
statute law to the contrary. But those terms, where written law was
silent, would still have had to stand up, in any court proceedings, to the
application of local custom, the principles of Islamic shariah and, in the
last resort, to locally applied principles of equity and fairness in order to
be enforceable.
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New Law will be of assistance to Commerce:
With the codification introduced by the new law, contracting parties will
now in fact find it easier than before to anticipate how local law will
affect their commercial objectives rather than having to wait for any
dispute to arise and come before the courts to establish whether their
interests are in fact properly protected and those commercial objectives
as efficacious as they expected.
Conclusion:
The new law should be welcomed for the forensic clarification it brings.
Its arrival is also most timely, given the rapid emergence of Oman in
recent years as one of the most attractive states within the GCC in
which to do business from a regulatory perspective
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