Dutch Court of Appeal cheers up bankers
Carel
van Lynden, a partner with the shipping and offshore
team at AKD in Rotterdam, says, “This is a good decision for mortgage
banks. This case was for the repayment of a loan, secured by a mortgage. The
courts decided that jurisdiction by Dutch courts is created simply by the
arrest by the mortgage bank, regardless of the flag and nationality of the
owner. It gives banks quick access to the very favourable auction system in The
Netherlands.”
The
applicability of the Arrest Convention and its ability to create jurisdiction
varies across different countries. Where it does not automatically create
jurisdiction it may offer protection to owners of vessels from or vessels
flying flags of nations not contracting to the convention. This decision in The
Netherlands lifts that protection.
Says
Van Lynden, “This is also a remarkable decision because for the first time a
claimant has not had to provide security in a case involving owners registered
in an EU country. The summary judgment sought by the bank against the owners is
a provisional measure under European law and until now has only ever been
granted if security for the claim was posted by the claimant. In this case the
court accepted that the bank was sufficiently financially strong and also
sufficiently likely to repay the claim if it later failed so no security was
required.”
AKD’s
shipping and offshore team provides a full range of legal services to the shipping
and offshore industry. The team is ranked top tier in both Chambers and Legal
500. AKD is a full-service firm with over 250 lawyers. www.akd.nl
Labels: EU law, ship arrest, ship fiance, ship mortgages
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