Anti-suit injunctions als Mittel der Jurisdiktionsabgrenzung

Pirmais vāks
LIT Verlag Münster, 2005 - 37 lappuses

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Abkürzungsverzeichnis
xiii
Literaturverzeichnis
xix
Einleitung
39
Die historischen Wurzeln der antisuit injunction
47
Die Eröffnung des richterlichen Ermessens
70
Die antisuit injunction in ihrem modernen Anwendungsbereich
103
Entwicklung der antisuit injunction in anderen Ländern des common law
166
Antisuit injunctions im europäischen Zivilprozessrecht
217
Die Vereinbarkeit der antisuit injunction mit Völkerrecht
248
Ergebnis
278
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Populāri fragmenti

78. lappuse - The Court will stay an action, brought within the jurisdiction, in respect of a cause of action arising out of the jurisdiction, if satisfied that no injustice will be done thereby to the plaintiff, and that the defendant would be subject to such injustice in defending the action as would amount to vexation and oppression, to which he would not be subjected if an action were brought, in another and accessible Court, where the cause of action arose...
90. lappuse - This right to come here is not confined to Englishmen. It extends to any friendly foreigner. He can seek the aid of our courts if he desires to do so. You may call this 'forum shopping' if you please, but if the forum is England, it is a 24 [1973] 2 Lloyd's Rep 197.
80. lappuse - In order to justify a stay, two conditions must be satisfied, one positive and the other negative: (a) the defendant must satisfy the Court that there is another forum to whose jurisdiction he is amenable in which justice can be done between the parties at substantially less inconvenience or expense, and (b) the stay must not deprive the plaintiff of a legitimate personal or juridical advantage which would be available to him if he invoked...
76. lappuse - I agree that it would be most unwise, unless one was actually driven to do so for the purpose of deciding this case, to lay down any definition of what is vexatious or oppressive, or to draw a circle, so to speak, round this Court unnecessarily, and to say that it will not move outside it. I would much rather rest on the general principle that the Court can and will interfere whenever there is vexation and oppression to prevent the administration of justice being perverted for an unjust end.
84. lappuse - ... trial of the action, ie in which the case may be tried more suitably for the interests of all the parties and the ends of justice367.
92. lappuse - My Lords, with all respect, that seems to me to recall the good old days, the passing of which many may regret, when inhabitants of this island felt an innate superiority over those unfortunate enough to belong to other races...
48. lappuse - The cause why there is a Chancery is, for that men's actions are so divers and infinite, that it is impossible to make any general law which may aptly meet with every particular act, and not fail in some circumstances.
80. lappuse - I think be stated thus: (1) A mere balance of convenience is not a sufficient ground for depriving a plaintiff of the advantages of prosecuting his action in an English court if it is otherwise properly brought. The right of access to the King's court must not be lightly refused.
135. lappuse - In my judgment, the time has come to lay aside the ritual incantation that this is a jurisdiction which should only be exercised sparingly and with great caution. There have been many statements of great authority warning of the danger of giving an appearance of undue interference with the proceedings of a foreign Court. Such sensitivity to the feelings of a foreign Court has much to commend it where the injunction is sought on the ground of forum non conveniens or on the general ground that the...

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