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Finnish Judiciary and Insolvency Law

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Title: Finnish Judiciary and Insolvency Law


1
Finnish Judiciary and Insolvency Law
  • Tuomas Hupli
  • LL. D, Specialist Counsel

2
FINNISH JUDICIARY AMONG THE STATE POWERS
  • Separation of Powers
  • The Constitution of Finland, para. 3
  • legislative powers the Parliament
  • governmental powers the President of the
    Republic together with the Government
  • judicial powers independent Courts of Law

3
  • Independence of courts
  • fundamental feature of The Rule of Law
  • judges are free to judge as the law says
  • judges are bound by the law and only by it
  • not threatened, guided or in any other way
    influenced by other state powers
  • some problems at the beginning of the new
    millennium

4
  • importance of free judging is at its peak while
    the case is pending
  • does not mean protection from criticism after the
    case is resolved
  • public criticism has become more usual (even
    aggressive) during and since the 1990s
  • probably due to the European Convention on Human
    Rights (Fair Trial)

5
(Discussion on) FUNCTIONS OF THE JUDICIARY
  • debate concerns the functions of civil procedure
    as a system
  • criminal procedure exists for
  • protecting the innocent from criminal sanctions
  • better to have ten criminals freed than anyone
    not guilty punished
  • fulfilling the responsibility for a crime
  • but note criminal procedure often includes civil
    claims as well

6
TRADITIONAL VIEW
  • Civil procedure exists to give legal protection
    for legal rights
  • most important task of a judge to make a
    judgment that is required by the law
  • focus on a single case, no matter if the result
    satisfies both (all) of the parties
  • and no matter if it satisfies the (political)
    purpose of the law in question (not mentioning
    the more general hopes of the legislator)
  • this might be called the function of legal
    protection
  • powerful influence on Finnish judges through
    decades

7
MODERN VIEW
  • Civil procedure exists to protect the purpose of
    the law (ratio legis)
  • created by prof. Per Olof Ekelöf
  • focus not on a single case, but on civil disputes
    in general
  • not so important if cases are resolved exactly as
    the law says
  • but that the courts generally enhance the purpose
    of the law

8
MODERN VIEW continues
  • even wrong decisions are acceptable (seen only
    by the rules of law)
  • as long as the result is in accordance with the
    purpose of the law
  • most important task of a judge to give the
    striking power for the purpose of the law and
    to make sure that legal sanctions become real
  • judgments of this kind direct the general
    behaviour in society
  • this is called the function of general direction
    /legal sanctions (in Swedish handlingsdirigering
    / genomslagskraft / sanktionsmekanism)

9
MODERN VIEW continues
  • key conception purpose of the law
  • prof. Ekelöf it is always there, the question is
    how to find it, and how to express it
  • every legal rule has a specific purpose
  • this is the core meaning of the rule
  • that meaning should be promoted even outside the
    core, i.e. in hard cases as well
  • mode of thinking purpose promotive (in Swedish
    det teleologiska tolkningssättet)

10
MODERN VIEW continues
  • advantages of Ekelöfs theory
  • clearness after the purpose is found, it really
    helps to solve hard cases
  • rationality it is rational to promote the
    purpose of the law
  • problems in Ekelöfs theory
  • can we really always find the spesific purpose of
    a rule, and so specify the core meaning?
  • dont many rules express compromises?
  • compromises are there just because law often
    tries to satisfy not one but many purposes, which
    may be conflicting

11
POSTMODERN VIEW
  • civil procedure is there to solve legal disputes
  • or even larger conflicts that cause legal
    disputes
  • focus on both single case and disputes in general
  • prof. Bengt Lindells response to Ekelöf
  • the primary task of the judge is not to protect
    legal rights in every case, not to make legal
    sanctions real, but to get rid of the dispute
  • function of dispute resolution / conflict
    management (Swe konfliktlösning)

12
POSTMODERN continues
  • expresses the parties right to get the result
    they choose
  • they have free will, they are free to make
    choices
  • use your mind, act rationally, settle your
    conflicts
  • casts a serious doubt to Ekelöfs idea that
    judges can and must find a specific will of the
    law (and that judges could take care of its
    succes in general)
  • expresses the complexity of law and compromises
    in it
  • this is typical postmodernism
  • no more a big tale with clear purpose
  • but many small tales with conflicting aims

13
POSTMODERN continues
  • Main problems
  • sets aside some principal needs (which are
    typical for modern human mind)
  • parties will and need to get an official
    statement on the contents of law
  • and how that law should be applied
  • may jeopardize the impartiality of a judge
  • judges must not hunt the settlement at any cost
  • judges proposal for settlement must be careful

14
SOME CONCLUSIONS
  • Theory of legal protection very hard to pass
  • parties come to court primarily to get what they
    individually want
  • not necessarily what the political purpose or
    spirit of the law might offer
  • and usually not to keep up good relations by
    making a good deal on the case
  • court is not too good a business forum
  • most often the trial is a result of unsuccessful
    negotiations
  • conlusion judges must still pay attention to
    questions like what is the content of law are
    parties entitled to what they claim what kind of
    result is required by the law?

15
CONCLUSIONS continue
  • Theory of legal sanctions / general direction
  • useful if the purpose of the law is simple and
    clear
  • not so useful if the law in question includes
    compromises, and tries to protect conflicting
    aims
  • as noted, this is often the case (more often than
    Ekelöf wanted to admit)
  • conclusion judges must pay attention to general
    direction in cases where the law is one-sided
    (not a complex of different interests)

16
CONCLUSIONS continue
  • Theory of dispute resolution / conflict
    management
  • absolutely belongs to a society of our times
    (many cultures, various values)
  • promotes effectiveness, parties activity in
    their own conflict, maybe even peaceful relations
  • but can never be the basic function of procedure
    in the court of law
  • conclusion judges must promote settlements by
    chairing the case in a way that keeps the way
    open for a settlement they can propose
    settlements of certain kind, but they must never
    loose the trust of the parties

17
FINNISH COURTS AND CASES IN THEM
  • Court System
  • General Courts
  • civil cases
  • criminal cases
  • Administrative Courts
  • appeals against actions taken by administrative
    bodies (tax law, other public obligations)
  • Special Courts Labour Court, Market Court

18
GENERAL COURTS
  • First instance District Courts (51)
  • Second instance Courts of Appeal (6)
  • Third (final) instance the Supreme Court
  • The Constitution, 98.4
  •  
  • Provisional courts shall not be established

19
TYPES OF CASES IN GENERAL COURTS
  • Civil Cases
  • Non-mandatory cases
  • Allowed to be settled
  • Majority of all civil cases
  • Mandatory
  • Not allowed to be settled
  • Most of the family cases
  • Court controls the best interest of a child (not
    of parents)

20
Types of cases continue
  • Note
  • Many mandatory cases can be settled as well
  • But only subject to the legal control by the
    court
  • Drawing the line between civil cases
  • Is the court bound by the will of the parties?
  • If yes non-mandatory (parties can settle the
    outcome)
  • If no mandatory (court investigates and orders
    the outcome)

21
Types of cases continue
  • Principle of Party Disposition
  • fundamental in non-mandatory cases
  • parties (not judges) decide
  • whether to claim legal protection at all
  • to what extent it is claimed
  • facts that form the basis for the claims
  • evidence to show those facts

22
Principle of party disposition continues
  • More precisely
  • parties cannot be forced to a trial
  • legal protection depends on the claims of the
    parties (no more and nothing else than what was
    claimed)
  • parties can waive any claims
  • they can admit any claims
  • they can acknowledge (confess) any facts
    counter to their own claims
  • Will of the parties binds the court

23
Party disposition continues
  • Why is the principle of disposition so important?
  • - to give the parties the same level of freedom
    in the court as outside of it
  • - private autonomy cannot be reduced in the
    court
  • - private individuals (incl. corporations) are
    allowed to arrange their respective relations as
    they want
  • - those relations are not guarded by judges,
    the government or by any other state power

24
Party disposition continues
  • Practical consequenses of the principle
  • acknowledgement of a fact makes that fact
    undisputed
  • the court must not investigate it
  • it must be taken as true ground for the judgement
  • admitted claim must be approved by a judgement
    (no other grounds than admittance itself)
  • defendants ignorance to the action leads to a
    judgement by default
  • groundless or meaningless response same result
    (for example I wont pay this)

25
Principle of Judicial Investigation
  • Counterpart to Party Disposition
  • Applied in mandatory civil cases and in criminal
    cases
  • Claims and facts always investigated by the court
  • Court is not bound by the claims alone
  • The outcome may differ from what was claimed
  • Court must applie the law, even against the will
    of the parties

26
Judicial investigation in Criminal Cases
  • Criminal sanctions absolutely an official task
  • No Plea Bargaining in Finnish Courts
  • Defendants confession is not a sufficient ground
    for a criminal sanction
  • but a piece of evidenceamong other material

27
RIGHT TO APPEAL
  • MAIN FEATURES OF THE FINNISH APPEAL SYSTEM
  • Free acces to the second instance
  • both questions of law and of evidence
  • no limits in relation to economic
    interest/criminal sanction
  • Limited acces to final instance
  • Leave system (permission required to appeal) in
    the Supreme Court
  • Supreme Courts role as a kind of law maker

28
  • MAIN PROBLEMS OF THE CURRENT SYSTEM
  • too much appeals in second instance courts gt
    rushes, delays
  • How to draw the line between different appeals
    (those needed / those that cannot lead to a
    change)

29
THE CONSTITUTION, para. 21
  • Everyone has the rightto have a decision
    pertaining to his or her rights or obligations
    reviewed by a court of law or other independent
    organ for the administration of justice.
  • Provisions concerning the publicity of
    proceedings, the right to be heard, the right to
    receive a reasoned decision and the right of
    appeal, as well as other guarantees of a fair
    trial and good governance shall be laid down by
    an Act.

30
THE CONSTITUTION, para. 21
  • Echoes from the European Convention on Human
    Rights, art. 6
  • Originally Finland had a reservation to the
    convention
  • traditionally, a process in a Court of Appeal had
    been purely based on written documents
  • fair trial demanded oral main hearing in a larger
    scale than Finland could then offer

31
  • the new (current) Finnish Constitution seems to
    include a larger right to appeal than ECHR art. 6
  • ECHR only requests this right to a person who has
    been convicted to a criminal punishment
  • The Constitution is not limited in that way
  • there seems to be a general right to appeal in
    Finland in any kind of cases
  • this means at least one appeal is allowed, and
    the right to make it must be real (not too
    complicated etc.)
  • limitations to this right must be established by
    law (Parliament Act)

32
DISCUSSION ON THE ACCES TO THE SECOND INSTANCE
  • along with the reform of 1997a leave system was
    proposed to the second instance (as we have in
    the Supreme Court)
  • for civil cases of max. 3 500 of interest, and
  • for minor criminal cases (economic sanction only)

33
  • Parliament rejected the leave system
  • New reform, new compromise 2002 Screening Stage
    in Courts of Appeal
  • Court decides first if the appeal has any chance
    of succes and is there a need for new oral
    hearing
  • if the three judges unanimously decide that the
    appeal cannot lead to a change in the District
    Courts judgement, and that no oral hearing is
    needed, the appeal stops right there
  • it will not be taken to a further investigation
    District Courts decision stays in force

34
  • Courts of Appeal actively applied the Screening
    Rules
  • Many appeals were rejected 2002-2004
  • Supreme Court rulings 2004 actually returned the
    system back to the old
  • Screening System lost much of its power
  • New rushes, delays in the Courts of Appeal
  • Courts of Appeal turned bitter, even angry
  • New proposal 2008 Leave System was proposed again

35
FUNCTION AND ROLE OF THE SUPREME COURT OF FINLAND
  • Functions
  • gives rulings (precedents) that guide lower
    courts
  • tries to keep up uniformity in judicial decision
    making (legal security)
  • Acces to Supreme Court is subject to a leave
    (from the year 1980)
  • Leave a permission to appeal
  • Outside the leave system extraordinary channels
    of appeal against judgments with legal force
  • serious procedural errors seriously false
    judgments important new evidence

36
  • Role of the Supreme Court
  • Highest general court, but in fact somewhere
    between a court and a law maker
  • Legal grounds for granting a leave are set out in
    the Code of Judicial Procedure
  • 1) correct application of the law in other
    similar cases (reason of precedent)
  • 2) serious error, procedural or of another kind,
    has occurred and that error forms a reason to
    reverse the particular judgement (reason of
    annulment)
  • 3) some other weighty reason

37
  • Discretion to grant (or to dismiss) a leave
    belongs to Supreme Court alone it has
  • no duty to state reasons for granting a leave
  • no duty to state reasons for dismissing it
  • Reason of precedent is the most important one
  • it is at hand, when a case includes an
    interesting question of law
  • how should the law be interpreted in similar
    cases?
  • how should it be applied?
  • not what where the facts that caused the case
    (pure questions of evidence dont usually meet
    the reason of precedent)

38
PROCEDURE IN THE SUPREME COURT
  • Deadline 60 days from the decision of the Court
    of Appeal
  • Process in the Supreme Court includes two stages
  • 1) discretion to grant / dismiss the leave
  • 2) if granted resolving the appeal
  • Documents must include both the application for
    the leave and the appeal
  • Leave is granted in about 10 of the cases

39
INSOLVENCY LAWS OF FINLAND
  • What is insolvency?
  • Wide view
  • insolvency means economic problems that need to
    be regulated by law
  • Legal definition
  • insolvency is a permanent state in which the
    debtor cannot pay his/her debts as they fall due

40
  • Why do we need insolvency law?
  • traditional view to force debtors
  • modern view to protect equality of creditors
  • postmodern view to prevent insolvency, to pay
    attention for conflicting interests and to
    rehabilitate (save) debtors, if possible
  • Present Nordic systems are combinations of all
    goals
  • force against debtors, equality of creditors,
    rehabilitation

41
  • Traditional form of insolvency procedure
    liquidation
  • Enforcement of a single judgement
  • Bankruptcy as a collective device for all of the
    creditors
  • Both mean seizing and selling the property of the
    debtor
  • New insolvency laws include some kind of
    rehabilitation
  • Finnish rehabilitation laws from the year 1993
  • Separate laws for consumers / corporations as
    debtors
  • Both try to save the property / business of the
    debtor
  • Have worked fairly well (with some reforms)

42
Thank YouPeltonen, Ruokonen Itäinen
Fabianinkatu 23, 00130 Helsinki Puhelin (09)
4176 030 Faksi (09) 4176 0417
office_at_peltonenlaw.fi www.peltonenlaw.fi
Y-tunnus 0200985-0
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