Beiting ógildingarreglu 36. gr. samningalaga: Hugleiðingar í tilefni af dómi Hæstaréttar 19. nóvember 2015 í máli nr. 100/2015

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Beiting ógildingarreglu 36. gr. samningalaga : Hugleiðingar í tilefni af dómi Hæstaréttar 19. nóvember 2015 í máli nr. 100/2015. / Solnes, Valgerdur; Petersen, Vidir Smari.

In: Timarit Loegfraedinga, Vol. 65, No. 4, 04.2015, p. 611-633.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Solnes, V & Petersen, VS 2015, 'Beiting ógildingarreglu 36. gr. samningalaga: Hugleiðingar í tilefni af dómi Hæstaréttar 19. nóvember 2015 í máli nr. 100/2015', Timarit Loegfraedinga, vol. 65, no. 4, pp. 611-633.

APA

Solnes, V., & Petersen, V. S. (2015). Beiting ógildingarreglu 36. gr. samningalaga: Hugleiðingar í tilefni af dómi Hæstaréttar 19. nóvember 2015 í máli nr. 100/2015. Timarit Loegfraedinga, 65(4), 611-633.

Vancouver

Solnes V, Petersen VS. Beiting ógildingarreglu 36. gr. samningalaga: Hugleiðingar í tilefni af dómi Hæstaréttar 19. nóvember 2015 í máli nr. 100/2015. Timarit Loegfraedinga. 2015 Apr;65(4):611-633.

Author

Solnes, Valgerdur ; Petersen, Vidir Smari. / Beiting ógildingarreglu 36. gr. samningalaga : Hugleiðingar í tilefni af dómi Hæstaréttar 19. nóvember 2015 í máli nr. 100/2015. In: Timarit Loegfraedinga. 2015 ; Vol. 65, No. 4. pp. 611-633.

Bibtex

@article{224e2ae5fb6c4534a8c669f1ff4e7dec,
title = "Beiting {\'o}gildingarreglu 36. gr. samningalaga: Huglei{\dh}ingar {\'i} tilefni af d{\'o}mi H{\ae}star{\'e}ttar 19. n{\'o}vember 2015 {\'i} m{\'a}li nr. 100/2015",
abstract = "A statutory provision in Nordic contract law provides for the invalidation or modification of contract if the contract is unreasonable. This rule, which contains a legal standard, deviates from the principles of pacta sunt servanda, freedom of contract and the contracting parties{\textquoteleft} fiduciary duties. Article 36 of the 1936 Icelandic Contract Act stipulates that in order for the courts to review a contract{\textquoteleft}s unreasonableness, they must assess (1) its content, (2) the bargaining position of the contracting parties, (3) the circumstances when the parties entered into the contract, and (4) circumstances subsequent to the material time. Icelandic Supreme Court Case law provides further guidance in the assessment where several factors have been emphasized, including the (5) burden of proof, (6) significance of the contracting parties{\textquoteleft} bargaining position, (7) the nature of contract as a product of negotiations that balance the contractual relationship, and (8) the view that business judgment is excluded from court review. The Icelandic Supreme Court resorted to Article 36 in its opinion of 19 November 2015, and modified a loan agreement{\textquoteleft}s provisions on the equivalence of interests and default interests due to its unreasonableness. This paper argues that the Supreme Court{\textquoteleft}s opinion lacks an appropriate portrayal of the Court{\textquoteleft}s step-by-step fairness review. As a result, the legitimacy of the opinion{\textquoteleft}s findings, that may very well be substantively correct, is subject to ambiguities. Second, this paper argues that the opinion plausibly entails an unreasonable end-result for the contract{\textquoteleft}s creditor. Third, this paper concludes that the opinion signifies the importance of thorough reasoning when courts apply legal standards, such as Article 36 of the Contract Act.",
author = "Valgerdur Solnes and Petersen, {Vidir Smari}",
year = "2015",
month = apr,
language = "Islandsk",
volume = "65",
pages = "611--633",
journal = "Timarit Loegfraedinga",
issn = "0493-2714",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Beiting ógildingarreglu 36. gr. samningalaga

T2 - Hugleiðingar í tilefni af dómi Hæstaréttar 19. nóvember 2015 í máli nr. 100/2015

AU - Solnes, Valgerdur

AU - Petersen, Vidir Smari

PY - 2015/4

Y1 - 2015/4

N2 - A statutory provision in Nordic contract law provides for the invalidation or modification of contract if the contract is unreasonable. This rule, which contains a legal standard, deviates from the principles of pacta sunt servanda, freedom of contract and the contracting parties‘ fiduciary duties. Article 36 of the 1936 Icelandic Contract Act stipulates that in order for the courts to review a contract‘s unreasonableness, they must assess (1) its content, (2) the bargaining position of the contracting parties, (3) the circumstances when the parties entered into the contract, and (4) circumstances subsequent to the material time. Icelandic Supreme Court Case law provides further guidance in the assessment where several factors have been emphasized, including the (5) burden of proof, (6) significance of the contracting parties‘ bargaining position, (7) the nature of contract as a product of negotiations that balance the contractual relationship, and (8) the view that business judgment is excluded from court review. The Icelandic Supreme Court resorted to Article 36 in its opinion of 19 November 2015, and modified a loan agreement‘s provisions on the equivalence of interests and default interests due to its unreasonableness. This paper argues that the Supreme Court‘s opinion lacks an appropriate portrayal of the Court‘s step-by-step fairness review. As a result, the legitimacy of the opinion‘s findings, that may very well be substantively correct, is subject to ambiguities. Second, this paper argues that the opinion plausibly entails an unreasonable end-result for the contract‘s creditor. Third, this paper concludes that the opinion signifies the importance of thorough reasoning when courts apply legal standards, such as Article 36 of the Contract Act.

AB - A statutory provision in Nordic contract law provides for the invalidation or modification of contract if the contract is unreasonable. This rule, which contains a legal standard, deviates from the principles of pacta sunt servanda, freedom of contract and the contracting parties‘ fiduciary duties. Article 36 of the 1936 Icelandic Contract Act stipulates that in order for the courts to review a contract‘s unreasonableness, they must assess (1) its content, (2) the bargaining position of the contracting parties, (3) the circumstances when the parties entered into the contract, and (4) circumstances subsequent to the material time. Icelandic Supreme Court Case law provides further guidance in the assessment where several factors have been emphasized, including the (5) burden of proof, (6) significance of the contracting parties‘ bargaining position, (7) the nature of contract as a product of negotiations that balance the contractual relationship, and (8) the view that business judgment is excluded from court review. The Icelandic Supreme Court resorted to Article 36 in its opinion of 19 November 2015, and modified a loan agreement‘s provisions on the equivalence of interests and default interests due to its unreasonableness. This paper argues that the Supreme Court‘s opinion lacks an appropriate portrayal of the Court‘s step-by-step fairness review. As a result, the legitimacy of the opinion‘s findings, that may very well be substantively correct, is subject to ambiguities. Second, this paper argues that the opinion plausibly entails an unreasonable end-result for the contract‘s creditor. Third, this paper concludes that the opinion signifies the importance of thorough reasoning when courts apply legal standards, such as Article 36 of the Contract Act.

M3 - Tidsskriftartikel

VL - 65

SP - 611

EP - 633

JO - Timarit Loegfraedinga

JF - Timarit Loegfraedinga

SN - 0493-2714

IS - 4

ER -

ID: 164376000