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E-raamat: Regulating Unfair Banking Practices in Europe: The Case of Personal Suretyships [Oxford Scholarship Online e-raamatud]

Edited by (Senior Researcher, Law Faculty; Senior Lecturer, Hanse Law School, University of Bremen), Edited by (Professor of European Law, Law Faculty & Somerville College, Oxford University)
  • Formaat: 606 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 19-Aug-2010
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-13: 9780199594559
  • Oxford Scholarship Online e-raamatud
  • Raamatu hind pole hetkel teada
  • Formaat: 606 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 19-Aug-2010
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-13: 9780199594559
"Private persons often stand surety for a business debt incurred by family members, friends, or employers. These suretyships are commonly banking guarantees contracted by means of standard terms. Sometimes the guarantor signs the contract while he/she is not aware of the financial risk related to the guarantee. He or she may not even know what a suretyship is. But in other circumstances the guarantor may be well aware of the risk, but may nonetheless assume it because of strong emotional ties which existbetween him/her and the main debtor. How, then, (if at all) does the law address the potential for 'unfairness' in such situations? Some systems choose to rely on objective criteria, such as identification of a manifest disproportion between the guaranteed amount and the surety's income and assets, while others are more open to subjective inquiry. The key point is variation. Different jurisdictions in Europe operate different models with different priorities. This book provides a comparative overviewof the remedies against unfair obligations of non-professional guarantors available in 22 EU Member States, based on a questionnaire which has been completed by an expert in each particular jurisdiction and covering both legal rules and the economic context of different credit markets and banking practices"--

Provided by publisher.

Private persons often stand surety for a business debt incurred by family members, friends, or employers. These suretyships are commonly banking guarantees contracted by means of standard terms. Sometimes the guarantor signs the contract while he/she is not aware of the financial risk related to the guarantee. He or she may not even know what a suretyship is. But in other circumstances the guarantor may be well aware of the risk, but may nonetheless assume it because of strong emotional ties which exist between him/her and the main debtor. How, then, (if at all) does the law address the potential for 'unfairness' in such situations?

Some systems choose to rely on objective criteria, such as identification of a manifest disproportion between the guaranteed amount and the surety's income and assets, while others are more open to subjective inquiry. The key point is variation. Different jurisdictions in Europe operate different models with different priorities.

This book provides a comparative overview of the remedies against unfair obligations of non-professional guarantors available in 22 EU Member States, based on a questionnaire which has been completed by an expert in each particular jurisdiction and covering both legal rules and the economic context of different credit markets and banking practices.
List of Contributors
ix
List of Abbreviations
xiii
Table of Cases
xvii
1 Regulating Unfair Suretyships in Europe: Methodology of a Comparative Study
1(4)
A Colombi Ciacchi
S Weatherill
2 Suretyships and Consumer Protection in the European Union through the Glasses of Law and Economics
5(22)
K Heine
R Janal
3 Remarks from a Comparative and EU Perspective
27(18)
S Weatherill
A Colombi Ciacchi
COUNTRY REPORTS
4 Austria
45(30)
W Faber
5 Belgium
75(24)
V Sagaert
6 Denmark
99(42)
MM Fogt
7 England and Wales
141(38)
L Fox O'Mahony
J Devenney
M Kenny
8 Estonia
179(28)
I Kull
9 Finland
207(22)
T Mikkola
10 France
229(24)
A-S Barthez
R Family
S Vigneron
11 Germany
253(24)
P Rott
12 Greece
277(26)
Y Erifillidis
13 Hungary
303(36)
T Tajti
14 Ireland
339(14)
P O'Callaghan
A O'Donoghue
15 Italy
353(36)
F Fiorentini
16 Latvia
389(12)
T Klauberg
17 Lithuania
401(14)
A Smaliukas
G Sulija
18 The Netherlands
415(20)
M Haentjens
19 Poland
435(18)
I Lobocka
20 Portugal
453(16)
J Sinde Monteiro
AD Pereira
21 Romania
469(24)
F Ciutacu
22 Scotland
493(12)
LJ Smith
23 Slovenia
505(14)
S Meznar
24 Spain
519(28)
T Rodriguez de Las Heras Ballell
25 Sweden
547(24)
AH Persson
Index 571
Aurelia Colombi Ciacchi is a Senior Researcher at the Law Faculty and a Senior Lecturer at the Hanse Law School, University of Bremen. She specializes in comparative law, European private law, constitutional and private law, contract and liability law.

Stephen Weatherill is the Jacques Delors Professor ofEuropean Community Law at the University of Oxford. He is also the Associate Director of the Centre for the Advanced Study of European and Comparative Law. He is the author of numerous articles and books, including Law and Integration in the European Union (1995, OUP), and Weatherill and Beaumont's EU Law (3rd edition 1999, Penguin), and is the editor of The Harmonisation of European Contract Law: Implications for European Private Laws, Business and Legal Practice (co-edited with S. Vogenauer, 2006, Hart).