II. Retention of property clauses
513
Article 4, sentence 2(b) of the CISG does not explicitly refer to retention of property clauses. The CISG’s applicability and its scope in case of such clauses has to be described in even more detail. Retention of property clauses (also referred to as retention of title or Romalpa clauses) are common in sales transactions to safeguard the seller in case of the buyer’s non-payment or bankruptcy.1061 Under a simple version of such a clause, the transfer of property is postponed and made dependent on the payment of the full purchase price. There are also more extended versions that, for example, broaden the condition of the transfer of property to the buyer’s additional performance of payment obligations under other contracts.1062 The main objective is better protection in case of bankruptcy, since the seller would in any case
1. Effects on property in the goods excluded under Article 4, sentence 2(b) of the CISG
514
As far as is apparent, courts and scholars agree that whether the transfer of property under national law is postponed or not and whether this protects the seller in the bankruptcy of the buyer, concerns the effect the contract might have on the property under national law and is, consequently, excluded from the Convention under Article 4, sentence 2(b).1064 Applying the proposed definition of property1065 would result in the same non-applicability of the CISG to these questions. It is notable that the first draft of 1935 had contained rules on retention of property clauses and their effect in bankruptcy in Annex 1.1066 The proposal to incorporate this question into the uniform sales law was, however, met with strong national resistance,1067 and was dropped in the development of uniform sales law soon after. It, thus, left national law to determine whether a retention of property clause has any effect on the allocation of the goods. Similarly, it is for national law to decide whether property under national law is considered not to pass or whether property under national law passes but a new security right in the goods is created instead, as for example, under section 2-401(1), sentence 2 of the UCC. Moreover, additional requirements by national laws for the effect of retention of property clauses are subject to national law: For example, under Swiss law a retention of property clause has to be registered to be effective pursuant to Article 715(1) of the Swiss Civil Code: “Der Vorbehalt des Eigentums an einer dem Erwerber übertragenen beweglichen Sache ist nur dann wirksam,
2. Effects on contractual rights and obligations not excluded under Article 4, sentence 2(b) of the CISG
515
Postponing the transfer of property should not be confused with the obligation to transfer the property under Article 30 of the CISG: As far as the retention of property clause sets out to modify or exclude rights and obligations under the contract and the CISG, the Convention remains directly applicable.1069
516
To avoid breaching the contract by not transferring property under Article 30 of the CISG, an extended retention of property clause will generally have to be interpreted to modify the relevant point in time for the obligation to transfer property under Article 30: While the seller is generally only in breach of the obligation to transfer the property when the buyer has paid in full,1070 which is why no modification under Article 30 is necessary, making the transfer of property dependent on additional or alternative obligations (for example, under All Monies clauses) will necessitate modifying the obligations under the CISG. This modification, specifically the required consent, is subject to the CISG and not national law.1071 Similarly, a retention of property clause can be meant to modify or facilitate the contract avoidance by the seller in case of non-payment. For example, the parties could provide that the seller is allowed to avoid the contract immediately if the buyer does not pay on time.1072 Whether the respective clause can be interpreted in this way will have to be evaluated under the CISG’s rules.1073 Again, there seems to be no disagreement in jurisprudence and academic literature in this regard.
230 3. Consent regarding the retention of property clause under Articles 14–24 of the CISG or under national law?
517
A more difficult question is whether or not the parties’ consent regarding a retention of property clause is subject to the CISG (Articles 14–24, 8). At first sight, there are different approaches to answering this question.
518
On the one hand, the Court of Appeal Koblenz found that the CISG does not regulate whether and how parties can agree on a retention of property clause in an international transaction.1074 Ferrari and Schroeter approve of this decision and align themselves with this view that could be interpreted to result in the non-applicability of the CISG also to the question of consent regarding the retention of property clause.1075 On the other hand, the Court of Appeal Arnhem-Leeuwarden applied the CISG to determine whether the parties had agreed on a retention of property clause: “the CISG does apply to the question of whether a retention of title clause has been agreed.”1076 The court thereby followed the approach of Dutch courts in applying the CISG regarding consent to a retention of property clause.1077 In the same vein, Von Doussa J found the CISG applicable to determine the parties’ consent to a retention of property clause in Roder Zelt- und Hallenkonstruktionen GmbH v Rosedown Park Pty Ltd.1078 Piltz and Vennmanns appear to agree with this approach, and argue that the CISG applies to the creation of a retention of property clause, while merely the “effect” of such clauses on the property under national law was left to national law, not their existence in terms of the necessary consent.1079
519
In my view, the opinions expressed obscure an important part of the necessary reasoning:1080 If the question arises who the owner of the goods is, the starting point is the law applicable to the property in the goods, generally the
520
Irrespective of this coherence in case law, the arguments in favor of applying the CISG have to be considered. Vennmanns advances two arguments. In his view, first, Article 7(1) of the CISG requires an interpretation that furthers a uniform interpretation and applying the uniform law to as many aspects as possible concerning international sales transactions.1085 Yet, Article 7(1) and its mandate to promote a uniform interpretation is restricted to the scope of the Convention and would be misunderstood if it were considered to require an extension of the CISG to as many aspects of an international sales transaction as possible. Moreover, it is unclear why the rules of consent under the CISG should apply to the prerequisites of a retention of property clause, while other requirements, such as form and necessary registrations of security rights, are not claimed to be governed by the Convention. Second, Vennmanns argues that the wording only excludes the “effect” the contract might have on the property under national law and not the consent regarding the retention of property clause, which is why a narrow interpretation of the wording allows applying the CISG to the consent requirement of a retention of property.1086 If one were to follow the argument that only the “effects” of such clauses were excluded from the Convention, one would either have to assume that the other requirements are also subject to the CISG or one would have to explain the differentiation. Given the background of the failed attempt of the first draft of a uniform sales law in 1935 to include an annex on retention of property clauses,1087 it seems improbable that the drafters considered the Convention to preempt national law regarding the prerequisites for retention of property clauses. A differentiation between consent and other requirements also seems improbable, since the drafters did not regard the uniform sales law as relevant to parts of the retention of property clause. Bagge who was involved since the very beginning of the unification process at Unidroit repeated this common understanding when stating that the retention of property was a subject “trop brûlant” and the Commission, therefore, wished not to treat it at all.1088 Both arguments in favor of applying the CISG are, therefore, not convincing.
521
Article 4, sentence 2(b) of the CISG, hence, also excludes the consent and other requirements for a valid transfer of property clause from the CISG without prejudice to whether the CISG can be applied indirectly if the appli
4. Summary
522
Retention of property clauses are only encompassed by the CISG to the extent that they modify or exclude the CISG’s provisions. As far as their effect on the property under national law is concerned, Article 4, sentence 2(b) of the CISG requires national law to be applied, including the rules on whether sufficient consent exists and other requirements for an effective retention of property are fulfilled. The CISG may nevertheless be applicable to assess the consent if the applicable property law raises a respective incidental question to the law applicable to the contract.
1061 | McCormack, p. 729; Schillig, pp. 376, 377; Torsello, International Business Law Journal (2000), 939, 945. |
1062 | Cf. the list of different retention of property clauses by McCormack, p. 728; Schillig, pp. 376, 386 et seq. |
1063 | See below for more details on property in insolvency, paras. 561 et seq. |
1064 | Roder Zelt- und Hallenkonstruktionen GmbH v Rosedown Park Pty Ltd, 28 April 1995, CISG-online 218; Usinor Industeel v. Leeco Steel Products, Inc., US District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, 28 March 2002, CISG-online 696; Foreign Trade Court of Arbitration of the Chamber of Commerce and Industry of Serbia, 15 July 2008, CISG-online 1795; Court of Appeal Arnhem-Leeuwarden, 2 June 2020, CISG-online 5289, para. 24; Schlüter, IHR 2001, 141, 148; Schlechtriem, 36 Victoria University of Wellington Law Review (2005), 781, 789; Dutton, 7 European Journal of Law Reform (2005), 239, 265; Schroeter, FS Magnus, pp. 301, 317; Honnold/Flechtner, para. 95; Piltz, IWRZ 2022, 243, 244. |
1065 | See above para. 172. |
1066 | Text of the draft Rabel, 9 RabelsZ (1935), 1, 41–42 and his remarks Rabel, 9 RabelsZ (1935), 1, 46. |
1067 | See for example, France 11 January 1937, part of S. D.N.-U. D.P. 1936 – Etude IV – Vente – Doc. 82. |
1068 | “Reservation of ownership in respect of a chattel transferred to the acquirer is only effective provided it is entered in the official register kept by the debt enforcement office at his or her current domicile.” This is the non-binding English translation of the Swiss Civil Code provided by the State administration in Switzerland, which is available on the Swiss government’s website. See recently on retention of property under Swiss law, Loher, Der Kauf unter Eigentumsvorbehalt im schweizerischen Recht, passim. |
1069 | Piltz, European Journal of Commercial Contract Law 2009, 134, 136; Honnold/Flechtner, para. 95 fn. 39; Cl. Witz, para. 114.91. |
1070 | See above para 194. |
1071 | MüKoBGB/P. Huber, Art. 4 para. 20; Schroeter, Internationales UN-Kaufrecht, para. 221. This holds true except for issues of validity under Art. 4, s. 2(a) CISG. |
1072 | Schroeter, Internationales UN-Kaufrecht, para. 223. |
1073 | Schroeter, Internationales UN-Kaufrecht, para. 223; Piltz, MAH Internationales Wirtschaftsrecht, § 7 para. 164. |
1074 | Court of Appeal Koblenz, 16 January 1992, CISG-online 47, para. 10. Sometimes, District Court Magdeburg, 16 May 2001, 5 O 3116/00 is cited to support this reading of the CISG, but in this case the retention of property clause was agreed upon in a purely national contract between two German parties and the decision, thus, provides little guidance on the issues discussed here. |
1075 | Schlechtriem/Schwenzer/Schroeter/Ferrari, 8th German edn, Art. 4 para. 30; Schroeter, FS Magnus, pp. 301, 317. |
1076 | Court of Appeal Arnhem-Leeuwarden, 2 June 2020, CISG-online 5289 para. 24 (translation by Vennmanns). |
1077 | Court of Appeal ’s-Hertogenbosch, 29 May 2007, CISG-online 1550. |
1078 | Roder Zelt- und Hallenkonstruktionen GmbH v Rosedown Park Pty Ltd, 28 April 1995, CISG-online 218, para. 25. |
1079 | Piltz, MAH Internationales Wirtschaftsrecht, § 7 para. 164; Piltz, Internationales Kaufrecht, para. 4-84; Vennmanns, IHR 2020, 205, 206–207. In Piltz, IWRZ 2022, 243, 247, the author pragmatically argues that when the requirements of the CISG are satisfied, national law rarely imposes more stringent conditions. |
1080 | Evidence of the created obscureness can be found in Gabriel, 9 VJ (2005), 219, 220 fn. 7 who questions the delineations and considers it “likely to continue to cause confusion”. |
1081 | See above on the relevant private international law rules, paras. 66 et seq. |
1082 | Cf. for retention of property and CISG under German property law, Schroeter, FS Magnus, pp. 301, 317. |
1083 | Besides the parties’ consent that the seller should remain the owner of the goods until payment is effected or a different condition is fulfilled, the seller in an abstract transfer system can also retain property by simply not giving his or her consent to transfer the property. It could be that the seller thereby breaches the contract, which would have to be assessed under the CISG. |
1084 | For example, sect. 22 of the Goods Act 1958 (Vic): “22. Property passes when intended to pass (1) Where there is a contract for the sale of specific or ascertained goods the property in them is transferred to the buyer at such time as the parties to the contract intend it to be transferred. (2) For the purpose of ascertaining the intention of the parties regard shall be had to the terms of the contract the conduct of the parties and the circumstances of the case.” |
1085 | Vennmanns, IHR 2020, 205, 206 (“Im Lichte dieser Kriterien [wird der Gedanke gefördert], dass das CISG auf möglichst viele Aspekte des Warenkaufs angewendet wird”). |
1086 | Vennmanns, IHR 2020, 205, 206. |
1087 | See above para. 514. |
1088 | Special Commission, Doc. 227, pp. 13, 14. |