Five legal instruments together form the Brussels Regime. All five legal instruments are broadly similar in content and application, with differences in their territory of application. They establish a general rule that individuals are to be sued in their state of domicile and then proceed to provide a list of exceptions. The instruments further provide for the recognition of judgments made in other countries.
Brussels Convention (1968) Recognition and enforcement of judgments in civil and commercial cases was originally accomplished within the
European Communities by the 1968
Brussels Convention, a treaty signed by the then six members of the Communities. This treaty was amended on several occasions and was almost completely superseded by a
regulation adopted in 2001, the Brussels I Regulation. Today the convention only applies between the 15 pre-2004 members of the European Union and certain territories of EU member states that are outside the Union:
Aruba, the
French overseas territories and
Mayotte. It is intended that the Brussels Convention will be replaced by the new Lugano Convention, the latter being open to accession by EU member states acting on behalf of non-European territories which belong to that member state.
Lugano Convention (1988) In 1988, the then 12 member states of the European Communities signed a treaty, the Lugano Convention, with the then six members of the
European Free Trade Association: Austria, Finland, Iceland, Norway, Sweden and Switzerland. The Lugano Convention served to extend the recognition regime to EFTA member state who are not eligible to sign the Brussels Convention. Other than the original signatories–three of which left EFTA to join the EU in 1995–only Poland has subsequently acceded to the Lugano Convention.
Liechtenstein, the only state to accede to the EFTA after 1988, has not signed either the 1988 Convention or its successor, the 2007 Lugano Convention. The convention is fully superseded by a 2007 version.
Brussels I Regulation (2001) The
Brussels I Regulation of 2001 was the primary piece of legislation in the Brussels framework from 2002 until January 2015. It substantially replaced the 1968 Brussels Convention, and applied to all EU member states excluding Denmark, which has a full
opt-out from implementing regulations under the
area of freedom, security and justice. It came into effect on 1 March 2002. The regulation is fully superseded by a recast Brussels I regulation.
Agreement with Denmark In 2005, Denmark signed an international agreement with the European Community to apply the provisions of the 2001 Regulation between the EU and Denmark. The 2005 agreement applies a modified form of the 2001 Regulation between Denmark and the rest of the EU. It also provides a procedure by which amendments to the regulation are to be implemented by Denmark. It applies the 2001 regulation to Denmark and other EU members from 1 July 2007. Should Denmark decide not to implement any change to the Regulation or its successor, then the Agreement ends automatically.
Lugano Convention (2007) In 2007, the European Community and Denmark signed with Iceland, Switzerland and Norway the new
Lugano Convention. This treaty was intended to replace both the old Lugano Convention of 1988 and the Brussels Convention and as such was open to signature to EFTA member states and to accession to EU member states on behalf of their extra-EU territories. While the former purpose was achieved in 2011 with the ratification of all EFTA member states (except for Liechtenstein which never signed the 1988 Convention nor the 2007 Convention), no EU member state has yet acceded to the convention on behalf of its extra-EU territories. The 2007 Convention is substantially the same as the 2001 Brussels I Regulation: the main difference being that the word "Regulation" is replaced with the word "Convention" throughout the text. Furthermore, the convention has a slightly different definition of the concept "court" and the 2007 convention is not adapted to the recast of the Brussels Regulation. It is also open to accession by other EFTA states as well as EU states acting on behalf of territories which are not part of the EU. Other states may join subject to approval of the present parties to the treaty. No accessions have taken place so far, but the Kingdom of the Netherlands planned to present to parliament an approval act for accession on behalf of Aruba, Caribbean Netherlands, Curaçao and possibly Sint Maarten in 2014.
Brussels I Regulation (recast) An amendment to the Brussels I Regulation, covering
maintenance obligations, was adopted in 2008. Neither Denmark nor the United Kingdom participated in the regulation, though Denmark notified the Commission of its acceptance of the amendment in January 2009. In 2012, the EU institutions adopted a recast Brussels I Regulation, which replaced the 2001 regulation with effect from 10 January 2015. The recast regulation promotes the "free movement of judgments" within the EU, and now also applies to jurisdiction regarding non-EU residents. It abolishes formalities for recognition of judgments and simplifies the procedure for a court chosen by the parties to commence proceedings (even if proceedings have started in another member state already). In December 2012 Denmark notified the Commission of its decision to implement the contents of 2012 regulation. The Lugano Convention Standing committee considered amending the Lugano Convention in accordance with the recast, but "made no recommendation on the possible amendment of the Lugano Convention and did not decide on any further steps." In 2014, the EU amended the Brussels I Regulation to clarify provisions regarding two courts which are "common to several member states": the
Unified Patent Court and the
Benelux Court of Justice jurisdiction. Denmark again notified the EU that it would apply the amendments. The Lugano Convention Standing Committee considered amending the Lugano Convention with respect to the unitary patent and Unified patent court, but decided to "wait for the results of further study". ==Scope and content==