Choosing between CISG and CESL: a comparison between the Common European Sales Law and the Vienna Sales Convention from the perspective of commercial parties

Authors
Publication date 2013
Host editors
  • M. Jurčová
  • J. Štefanko
Book title Proposal for a regulation on a Common European Sales Law: a new legal regime for domestic and cross-border trade
ISBN
  • 9788080826185
Pages (from-to) 36-54
Publisher Trnava: Trnava University
Organisations
  • Faculty of Law (FdR) - Centre for the Study of European Contract Law (CSECL)
Abstract
If the Common European Sales Law (CESL) is adopted, commercial parties will have the opportunity to choose between this instrument and the Vienna Sales Convention (CISG) to regulate their cross-border commercial sales contracts. In this paper, a comparison is made between the two international legal instruments in order to answer the question: why and when commercial parties should want to opt-in to the CESL (and opt-out of CISG)? In this paper it is argued that as CESL remedies major flaws in CISG, in fact CESL is the better choice for commercial parties, in particular because it introduces coherent rules on defects of consent, clearer and more balanced rules regarding the incorporation of standard terms, and a scheme for the testing of the unfairness of standard terms.
Document type Chapter
Language English
Downloads
399736.pdf (Final published version)
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