THIRD-PARTY CONTRACTS, LEGAL RETROACTIVITY, AND PUNITIVE DAMAGES FROM EUROPE TO LATIN AMERICA

REVISTA DA EMERJ

Endereço:
Rua Dom Manuel, número 25, Centro
Rio de Janeiro / RJ
20.010-090
Site: https://ojs.emerj.com.br/index.php/revistadaemerj/index
Telefone: (21) 3133-3886
ISSN: 14154951
Editor Chefe: Antonio Aurelio Abi Ramia Duarte
Início Publicação: 31/12/1997
Periodicidade: Anual
Área de Estudo: Direito

THIRD-PARTY CONTRACTS, LEGAL RETROACTIVITY, AND PUNITIVE DAMAGES FROM EUROPE TO LATIN AMERICA

Ano: 2017 | Volume: 20 | Número: 79
Autores: Ángel R. Oquendo
Autor Correspondente: Ángel R. Oquendo | [email protected]

Palavras-chave: contratos, retroatividade legal, problemas punitivos

Resumos Cadastrados

Resumo Inglês:

The civil-law system shows its true face as it travels from the Continental European core to the Latin American periphery. Many of the principal institutions have found a home and thrived in the new and radically different environment. One can best study them there by contemplating how they have preserved some of their most basic features despite having transformed themselves into something else. The notion of the civil-law tradition and that of codification have themselves undergone this dialectic of transformation and preservation. So have the traditional approach to contractual interpretation and to third-party agreements and the common proscriptions on retroactivity and punitive damages. In Latin America, as well as in Continental Europe, the intent of the parties typically takes precedence over the text of the contract and an agreement normally may benefit a third party despite the general restriction on extra-party effects. Similarly, a relatively strict ban on the retroactive application of statutes and on the imposition of punitive damages prevails on both sides of the Atlantic.