THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY
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SOCIALIST REPUBLIC OF VIETNAM
Independence – Freedom - Happiness
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No.: 92/2015/QH13
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Hanoi, November 25th, 2015
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CODE
OF CIVIL PROCEDURE
Pursuant
to the Constitution of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam;
The
National Assembly promulgates the Civil Procedure Code.
PART ONE
GENERAL PROVISIONS
Chapter I
TASK AND EFFECT OF THE CIVIL PROCEDURE
CODE
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The Civil
Procedure Code provides for the basic principles in civil proceedings; the
order and procedures for initiating lawsuits at People’s Court (hereinafter
referred to as Courts) to settle cases of civil, marriage and family, business,
trade and labor (hereinafter referred to as civil lawsuits) and order and
procedures to request the Court to settle matters regarding civil, marriage,
family, business, trade, labor (hereinafter referred to as civil matters);
order and procedures for settlement of civil lawsuits and civil matters
(hereinafter referred to as civil cases) at Courts; procedures for recognition
and enforcement in Vietnam civil judgments/decisions of foreign Courts, award
of foreign arbitrators; enforcement of civil judgments; tasks, entitlements and
responsibilities of proceeding authorities/officers; rights and obligations of
participants in procedures, of individuals, of regulatory agencies, people’s
armed units, economic organizations, political organizations, socio-political
organizations, political – social – professional organizations, social
organizations, social – professional organizations (hereinafter referred to as
agencies and organizations) that are relevant to ensure that the resolution of
civil cases is carried out quickly, accurately, truthfully and lawfully.
The Civil
Procedure Code contributes to the protection of the justice, of human’s rights,
civil rights, protection of socialist regime, of the interests of the State,
legitimate rights and interests of agencies, organizations and individuals;
educates people to strictly abide by law.
Article 2. Regulated entities and effect of the Civil
Procedure Code
1. The
Civil Procedure Code applies to all civil proceedings throughout the territory
of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam, including mainland, offshore island,
territorial waters and airspace.
2. The
Civil Procedure Code applies to all civil proceedings conducted by consular
offices of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam in foreign countries.
3. The
Civil Procedure Code applies to the settlement of civil cases involving foreign
element(s); where the international treaties to which the Socialist Republic of
Vietnam is a signatory provide otherwise, the provisions of such international
treaties shall apply.
4. For
foreign individuals, agencies and organizations that enjoy diplomatic
privileges and immunities or consular privileges and immunities under
Vietnamese laws, international treaties to which the Socialist Republic of
Vietnam is a signatory, the civil cases related to such individuals, agencies
and/or organizations shall be settled through the diplomatic channel.
Chapter II
BASIC PRINCIPLES
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All civil
procedural activities of presiding agencies, presiding officers, civil
procedure-participants and of relevant individuals, agencies and organizations
must comply with the provisions of this Code.
Article 4. Right to request Courts to protect legitimate
rights and interests
1.
Individuals, agencies and organizations defined by this Code shall have the
right to institute civil lawsuits, request the resolution of civil matters at
competent Courts in order to protect the justice, human’s rights, civil rights,
benefits of the State, legitimate rights and interests of their own or of
others.
2. Courts
must not refuse to settle a civil case for the reason that there is no
applicable law provision for such case.
A civil
case without applicable law provisions is a civil case falling within the
governing scope of civil laws but there is no applicable law provision at the
time such civil case arises and an agency/organization/individual requests the
Court to settle.
The
settlement of civil case specified in this clause shall comply with the
principles prescribed in the Civil Code and this Code.
Article 5. Involved parties' right to decision-making and
self-determination
1. The
involved parties shall have the right to decide whether to initiate civil
lawsuits, petition jurisdictional Courts to settle the civil cases. The Courts
shall only accept for settlement of civil cases when they have received lawsuit
petitions and/or written requests from an involved party and shall settle the
civil cases only within the scope of such lawsuit petition or written request.
2. During
the settlement of a civil case, the involved parties shall have a right to
terminate or change their petitions or voluntarily reach agreement with one
another, which is not contrary to law and social ethics.
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1. The
involved parties shall have the right and obligation to initiatively collect
and supply evidence to Courts and prove that their petitions are well grounded
and lawful.
Agencies,
organizations and individuals initiating lawsuits or file their petitions to
protect legitimate rights and interests of their own or of other persons shall
have the right and obligation to collect and supply evidence and to prove the
ground and the lawfulness like the involved parties.
2. The
Courts shall assist the involved parties to collect evidence and shall only
collect and verify the evidence in the cases prescribed by this Code.
Article 7. Responsibility of competent individuals,
agencies and organizations to supply materials and evidences
Agencies,
organizations and individuals shall, within the scope of their tasks and
powers, provide the involved parties, the Courts, the People’s Procuracy with
materials and evidences currently being under their possession or management
sufficiently and timely at the petition of the involved parties, the Courts and
the Procuracy according to regulations in this Code and shall take legal
responsibility for the supply of such materials and evidences; in case they
cannot do so, a written notification containing the explanation shall be made
and sent to the involved parties, the Courts and the Procuracy.
Article 8. Equality in rights and obligations in civil
procedures
1. All
people are equal before law regardless of their ethnics, religions, educational
levels, occupations and social levels.
All
agencies, organizations and individuals are equal in the implementation of
rights and obligations in civil procedures.
2. The
Courts have the responsibility to create equal conditions for agencies,
organizations and individuals to exercise their rights and obligations in civil
procedure
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1. The
involved parties have the right to defend themselves or to ask lawyers or other
persons who satisfy conditions specified in this Code to protect their
legitimate rights and interests.
2. The
Courts have the responsibility to ensure the conditions for the involved
parties to exercise their right to defense.
3. The
State has the responsibility to provide legal assistant for such entities
according to law provisions enabling them to exercise the right to protect
their legitimate rights and interests before the Courts.
4. No one
shall limit the right to protect legitimate rights and interests of the
involved parties in civil procedures.
Article 10. Mediation in civil procedures
The
Courts have the responsibility to conduct mediation and create favorable
conditions for the involved parties to reach agreement with one another on the
resolution of civil cases under the provisions of this Code.
Article 11. Participation of People’s Jurors in
adjudication of civil lawsuits
1. The
adjudication of first instance of civil lawsuits shall be attended by the
People’s Jurors as prescribed in this Code, except for adjudication under the
simplified procedures.
2. Upon
the vote for decisions on settlement of civil lawsuits, the People’s Jurors are
equal in powers to the Judges.
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1. Upon
trial over civil lawsuits, Judges and People’s Jurors shall be independent and
only comply with law.
2. All
acts of hindering or interfering the adjudication of Judges and People’s Jurors
or the settlement of civil matters of Judges are strictly prohibited.
Article 13. Responsibilities of civil proceeding
authorities and proceeding officers
1.
Proceeding authorities/officers must respect people and submit to people’s
supervision.
2. The
Courts are responsible for the protection of the justice, human’s rights, civil
rights, socialist regime, benefits of the State, legitimate rights and
interests of organizations and individuals.
The
procuracies are responsible for the protection of the law, human’s rights,
civil rights, socialist regime, benefits of the State, legitimate rights and
interests of organizations and individuals and contribute in the assurance that
law is strictly and consistently complied with.
3.
Proceeding authorities/officers must keep the State secrets and work secret
according to law; preserve the nation’s fine customs and practices, protect
minors, keep professional secrets, business secrets, personal secrets of the
involved parties at their legitimate petitions.
4. The
proceeding authorities/officers shall take legal responsibility for the
performance of their tasks and powers. If a proceeding officer commits a
violation against law, depending on the nature and severity of the violation,
he/she shall be disciplined or liable to criminal prosecution according to law
provisions.
5. If a
proceeding officer, during the performance of his/her tasks and powers, commits
illegal acts that causes damages to an agency/organization/individual, then the
direct management agency of such officer shall pay the compensation to the
aggrieved party according to law provisions pertaining to compensation
responsibility.
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A Court
shall conduct the collective trial over civil lawsuits and make decisions under
the majority rule, except for adjudication according to simplified procedures.
Article 15. Prompt, equal and public trials by Courts
1. The
Court trials shall be conducted promptly and within the time prescribed in this
Code and must ensure the equality.
2. The
Court trials shall be public. In special cases that it is necessary to keep the
State secrets, preserve the nation’s fine customs and practices, protect minors
or to keep professional secrets, business secrets, personal secrets of the
involved parties at their legitimate claims, the Courts may conduct the trials
behind closed doors.
Article 16. Ensuring impartiality and objectiveness in
civil procedures
1. Chief
Justices, Judges, People’s Jurors, ombudspersons, Court clerks, procurators
chairpersons, prosecutors, inspectors, interpreters, expert-witnesses and
members of Price Assessment Councils must not conduct or participate in civil
procedures if there are good reasons to believe that they may not be impartial
in performing their tasks and exercising their powers.
2. The
assignment of proceeding officers must ensure the conditions for them to be
impartial and objective when exercising their tasks and powers.
Article 17. Following the two-level adjudication regime
1. The
Courts shall follow the two-level adjudication regime.
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First-instance
judgments or decisions of the Courts which are not appealed against according
to appellate procedures within the time limit provided for by this Code shall
become legally effective. Where first-instance judgments or decisions are
appealed against, the cases must undergo appellate trials. The appellate judgments
or decisions shall be legally effective.
2. The
Courts' first-instance judgments or decisions of the Courts which have already
taken legal effect but have been detected with law violations or new details
according to provisions of this Code shall be reviewed according to the
cassation or reopening procedures.
Article 18. Cassation of trials
The
Supreme People’s Court shall conduct cassation of trials of all Courts;
Collegial People’s Courts shall conduct cassation of trials of People’s Courts
of central-affiliated cities and provinces (hereinafter referred to as People’s
Courts of provinces), People’s Courts of districts, towns,
provincial-affiliated cities and cities affiliated to central-affiliated cities
(hereinafter referred to as People’s Courts of districts) within their
competence to ensure that law is applied strictly and consistently.
Article 19. Assurance of the effect of Courts' judgments
and decisions
1.
Legally effective judgments and decisions of Courts must be enforced and
strictly observed by all agencies, organizations and individuals.
2. Within
the scope of their respective tasks and powers, Courts and agencies or
organizations which are assigned the tasks to enforce Courts' judgments or
decisions must strictly enforce them and bear responsibility before law for the
performance of such tasks.
3. Courts
may request the enforcement authorities to notify them of the progress and the
result of the enforcement of the Courts’ judgments/decisions. The enforcement
authorities directly in charge of the enforcement of the Courts’
judgments/decisions shall respond the Courts’ request.
Article 20. Spoken and written language used in civil
procedures
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Participants
in civil procedures may use the voices and scripts of their ethnic groups; in
this case interpreters are required.
Participants
in civil procedures being people having hearing, speaking or visual disability
may use the language of disabled people; in this case interpreters are
required.
Article 21. Supervising the law observance in civil
procedures
1. The
Procuracies shall supervise the law observance in civil procedures and exercise
the rights to petition, recommendation
or appeal according to law provisions in order
to ensure lawful and timely resolution of civil cases.
2. The
Procuracies shall participate in first-instance meetings for civil matters;
first-instance trials of lawsuits where evidence are collected by the Courts or
where matters under dispute are public properties, public benefits, land use
right, housing use right or involved parties are minors, legally incapacitated
persons or, persons with limited capacity of exercise, people with limited
cognition or behavior control or cases specified in clause 2 Article 4 of this
Code.
3. The
procuracies shall participate in appellate, cassation and reopening
trials/meetings.
4. The
Supreme People’s Procuracy shall preside over and cooperate with the Supreme
People’s Court in providing guidance on the implementation of this Article.
Article 22. Courts' responsibility for forwarding documents
and papers
1. The
Courts shall have the responsibility to delivery, forward and notify of their
judgments, decisions, summons, invitations and other relevant documents to the
participants in the civil procedures according to the provisions of this Code.
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Article 23. Participation of agencies, organizations and
individuals in civil procedures
Agencies,
organizations and individuals shall have the right and obligation to
participate in civil procedures according to the provisions of this Code,
contributing to the lawful and prompt resolution of civil cases at courts.
Article 24. Assurance of oral argument in adjudication
1. The
Courts shall ensure that the involved parties and people protecting legitimate
rights and interests of the involved parties implement the right to get involve
in oral argument in first-instance trials, appellate trials, cassation trials
and reopening trials according to provisions of this Code.
2. The
involved parties and the people protecting the legitimate rights and interests
of the involved parties may collect and submit the evidences and relevant
materials to the Courts since the Courts accepted civil lawsuits and shall notify
to each other of the submitted materials and evidences; present, give question
and answer, express opinions about evidences and present applicable provisions
to defend their claims and their legitimate rights and interests or to reject
others’ claims according to provisions of this Code.
3. During
the process of adjudication, every material and evidence shall be reviewed
sufficiently, obviously, comprehensively and publicly, except for cases where
materials and evidences must not be published prescribed in clause 2 Article
109 of this Code. The Courts shall direct the oral argument, make question
about unclear matters and issue judgments/decisions on the basis of the
argument result.
Article 25. Assurance of the right to complaints and
denunciations in civil procedures
Agencies,
organizations and individuals shall have the right to complain about,
individuals shall have the right to denounce, illegal acts of proceeding
authorities/officers or of any agencies, organizations and individuals in civil
proceedings.
Competent
agencies, organizations or individuals must accept, consider and settle
promptly and lawfully complaints and denunciations; notify in writing the
settlement results to the complainants and denouncers.
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COURT'S JURISDICTION
Section 1. CIVIL CASES FALLING UNDER THE COURTS'
JURISDICTION
Article 26. Civil disputes falling under the courts'
jurisdiction
1.
Disputes over the Vietnamese nationality among individuals.
2.
Disputes over property ownership and other rights over property.
3.
Disputes over civil transactions, civil contracts.
4.
Disputes over intellectual property rights, technology transfers, except for
the cases prescribed in Clause 2, Article 30 of this Code.
5.
Disputes over property inheritance.
6.
Disputes over compensation for non-contractual damage.
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8.
Disputes over the development and utilization of water resources and the waste
discharge to water as prescribed in the Law on water resources.
9.
Disputes over land according to legislation on land; disputes over the right to
forest ownership/enjoyment according to regulations in the Law on forest
protection and development.
10.
Disputes relating to the professional press operation under law on press.
11.
Disputes relating to petitions for declaration of notarized documents to be invalid.
12.
Disputes relating to properties forfeited to enforce judgments in accordance
with the law on enforcement of civil judgments.
13.
Disputes over property auction results and payment of expenses for registration
to buy property through auction in accordance with the law on enforcement of
civil judgment.
14. Other
civil disputes, except for cases within the jurisdiction of other agencies and
organizations as prescribed by law.
Article 27.
Civil petitions falling under the courts' jurisdiction
1. The petition for
declaration or revocation of a decision on declaration of a legally
incapacitated person, person with limited capacity of exercise or a person with
limited cognition or behavior control.
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3. The petition for
declaration or revocation of decision on declaration of a person’s missing.
4. The petition for
declaration or revocation of decision on declaration of a person’s death.
5. The petition for
recognition and enforcement in Vietnam or non-recognition of civil judgments or
decisions, or decisions on properties in criminal or administrative judgments
or decisions of foreign Courts or not to recognize civil judgments or
decisions, or decisions on properties in criminal or administrative judgments
or decisions of foreign courts, which are not requested to be enforced in
Vietnam.
6. The petition for
declaration of notarized documents to be invalid.
7. The petition for
recognition of the successful out-of-Court mediation.
8. The petition for
recognition of property within Vietnam’s territory to be ownerless and for
recognition of the ownership of the persons managing such ownerless property
within Vietnam’s territory according to regulations in point e clause 2 Article
470 of this Code.
9. The petition for
determination of property ownership and use rights, division of common
properties for enforcement of judgments in accordance with regulations in the
Law on enforcement of civil judgments.
10. Other
civil petitions, except for cases within the jurisdiction of other
agencies and organizations as prescribed by law.
Article 28. Marriage and family-related disputes falling
under the courts' jurisdiction
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2.
Disputes over division of spousal common property during their marriage.
3.
Disputes over change of post-divorce child custodian.
4.
Disputes over determination of fathers or mothers for children; or
determination of children for fathers or mothers.
5.
Disputes over alimonies.
6.
Disputes over childbirth using the childbirth assistance technique or surrogacy
for humanitarian reasons.
7.
Disputes over child custodian, division between couples living like husbands
and wives without marriage registration or between spouses illegally cancel
the marriage registration.
8. Other
disputes relating to marriage and family, except for cases within the
jurisdiction of other agencies and organizations as prescribed by law.
Article 29.
Marriage-and family-related petitions falling under the courts' jurisdiction
1. The petitions for
revocation of illegal marriages.
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3. The petitions for
recognition of agreements between the parents about the change of post-divorce
custodian or recognition of change of post-divorce child custodian decided by
agencies, organizations and individuals according o law regulations on marriage
and family.
4. The petitions for
restriction on rights of a father or mother towards a minor child or his/her
right to see the child after divorce.
5. The
petitions for termination of the adoption of children.
6. The
petitions relating to the surrogacy according to law regulations on marriage
and family.
7. The
petitions for recognition of agreements of termination of the effect of the
division of spousal common properties during their marriage to have been
carried out according to the judgments/decisions of the Courts.
8. The
petitions for declaration of nullification of the agreements on the property
division between the husband and the wife according to legislation on marriage
and family.
9. The
petition for recognition and enforcement in Vietnam or for non-recognition of
judgments or decisions on marriage and family of foreign Courts or other
foreign competent agencies; or for non-recognition of judgments or decisions on
marriage and family of foreign Courts or other competent foreign competent
agencies which are not requested to be enforced in Vietnam.
10. The
petition for determination of fathers or mothers for children; or determination
of children for fathers or mothers according to legislation on marriage and
family.
11. Other
petitions relating to marriage and family, except for cases within the
jurisdiction of other agencies and organizations as prescribed by law.
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1.
Disputes arising from business or trade activities among individuals and/or
organizations with business registration, which are all for the purpose of
profits.
2.
Disputes over intellectual property rights or technology transfers among
individuals or organizations, which are all for the purposes of profits.
3.
Disputes between persons who are not members of a company but involve in
transaction in transfer of capital holding and the company and/or its members.
4.
Disputes between a company and its members; disputes between a limited
liability company and its manager or between a joint-stock company and members
of its Board of Directors, its Director or its General Director, or among
members of a company regarding the establishment, operation, dissolution,
merge, consolidation, total division, partial division, property transfer
and/or organizational transformation of the company.
5. Other
civil disputes relating to business or trade activities, except for cases
within the jurisdiction of other agencies and organizations as prescribed by
law.
Article 31. Business or trade petitions falling under the
courts' jurisdiction
1. The petitions
for revocation of a resolution of the Shareholder general assembly, a
resolution of the Member assembly according to legislation on enterprise.
2. The
petitions related to the resolution of disputes by Vietnamese commercial
arbitrators under law regulations on commercial arbitration.
3. The
petitions for arrest of aircrafts, seagoing vessels according to law on
Vietnamese civil aviation, Vietnamese maritime, except for cases where
aircrafts/vessels must be arrested serving lawsuit settlement.
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5. The
petitions for recognition and enforcement in Vietnam of foreign arbitrators'
award on business or commercial matters.
6. Other
petitions relating to business or trade activities, except for cases within the
jurisdiction of other agencies and organizations as prescribed by law.
Article 32. Labor disputes falling under the courts'
jurisdiction
1.
Individual labor disputes between employees and employers, which have been
mediated through mediation procedures of labor mediators but the involved
parties fail to comply with mediation results, or which cannot be mediated or
are not mediated within the law- established time limit, except the following
disputes which must not necessarily be mediated through mediation procedures:
a) Disputes
over labor discipline in the form of dismissal or over cases of unilateral
termination of labor contracts;
b)
Disputes over damage compensation or over benefit policy upon termination of
labor contracts;
c)
Disputes between household servants and their employers;
d)
Disputes over social insurance as prescribed in laws on social insurance, over
health insurance as prescribed in laws on health insurance, over unemployment
insurance as prescribed in laws on employment or over occupational accident
insurance and occupational diseases as prescribed in laws on labor hygiene and
safety;
dd)
Disputes over damage compensation between laborers and enterprises or
non-business organizations sending laborers to work overseas under contracts.
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3. Labor
disputes include:
a)
Disputes over vocational training and practice;
b)
Disputes over labor outsourcing;
c)
Disputes over rights relating to trade union, trade union expenditure;
d)
Disputes over labor safety and labor hygiene.
4.
Disputes over compensation for illegal strike.
5. Other
labor disputes, except for cases within the jurisdiction of other agencies and
organizations as prescribed by law.
Article 33. Labor petitions falling under the courts'
jurisdiction
1.
Petitions for declaration of a labor contract/collective bargaining agreement to be
invalid.
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3.
Petitions for recognition and enforcement in Vietnam of foreign courts' labor
judgments or decisions, or for non-recognition of foreign courts' labor
judgments or decisions which are not requested to be enforced in Vietnam.
4.
Petitions for recognition and enforcement in Vietnam of labor award of foreign
arbitrators.
5. Other
petitions, except for cases within the jurisdiction of other agencies and
organizations as prescribed by law.
Article 34. Jurisdiction of Courts over particular
decisions of agencies/organizations
1. When
resolving civil cases, the Courts may revoke particular decisions of agencies
or organizations or competent persons of such agencies or organizations in
particular cases which are obviously unlawful, infringing upon the rights and
legitimate interests of involved parties in these civil cases.
2.
Particular decisions specified in clause 1 of this Article are decisions on
particular matters that have been issued and applied once to one or a number of
particular entities. If the civil cases are related to such decisions, they
must be considered in such the same civil cases by the courts.
3. When
considering repealing decisions specified in clause 1 of this Article, the
Courts shall invite agencies, organizations or competent persons that have
issued such decisions to participate in the procedures in the capacity as
person with relevant interests and duties.
Agencies,
organizations, competent persons who have issued the decisions must participate
in the procedures and present their opinions about the particular decisions
repealed by the courts.
4.
Competence of Courts in charge of civil cases subject to considering the
repealing of particular decisions specified in clause 1 of this Article shall
be determined according to corresponding provisions in the Law on administrative
procedures about competence of People’s Courts of districts/provinces.
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Article 35. Jurisdiction of People’s Courts of districts
1.
People's Courts of districts shall have the jurisdiction to settle according to
first-instance procedures the following disputes:
a)
Disputes over civil matters, marriage and family, prescribed in Articles 26 and
28 of this Code;
b)
Disputes over business/trade activities prescribed in clause 1 Article 30 of
this Code;
c) Labor
disputes prescribed in Article 32 of this Code.
2.
People's Courts shall have the jurisdiction to resolve the following petitions:
a) Civil
petitions prescribed in Clauses 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 7, 8, 9 and 10 of Article 27 of
this Code;
b)
Petitions relating to marriage and family prescribed in Clauses 1, 2, 3, 4, 5,
6, 7, 8, 10 and 11 of Article 29 of this Code;
c)
Petitions relating to business/trade activities prescribed in clause 1 and
clause 6 Article 30 of this Code;
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3.
Disputes and petitions prescribed in Clauses 1 and 2 of this Article, which
involve parties or properties in foreign countries or which must be judicially
entrusted to representative agencies of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam
overseas or to foreign courts/competent agencies, shall not fall under the
jurisdiction of people's Courts of districts, except for cases specified in
clause 4 of this Article.
4.
People’s Courts of districts where Vietnamese citizens reside shall be in
charge of cancelling illegal marriage, settling divorce petitions and disputes
pertaining to rights and obligations of spouses, parents and children, parents
and children adoption and guardian relationship between Vietnamese citizens
living in frontier areas and citizens of neighboring countries living near
Vietnam according to provisions of this Code and other Vietnam’s law
provisions.
Article 36. Jurisdiction of Tribunals of People’s Courts of
districts
1. The
Civil tribunals of People's Courts of districts shall have the jurisdiction to
resolve according to first-instance procedures cases relating to civil,
business, trade and labor matters falling under the jurisdiction of the
People’s Courts of districts as provided for in Article 35 of this Code.
2. The
family and juvenile tribunals of People's Courts of districts shall have the
jurisdiction to resolve according to first-instance procedures for cases
relating to marriage and family falling under the jurisdiction of the People’s
Courts of districts as provided for in Article 35 of this Code.
3.
Regarding People’s Courts without a tribunal, the Chief Justice shall take
responsibility for conducting adjudication and assigning the Judge to take
charge of the cases falling under the jurisdiction of People’s Courts of
districts.
Article 37. Jurisdiction of People’s Courts of provinces
1.
People's Courts of provinces shall have the jurisdiction to settle according to
first-instance procedures the following disputes:
a) Civil,
marriage- and family-related, business, trade or labor disputes prescribed in
Articles 26, 28, 30 and 32 of this Code, except for disputes falling under the
jurisdiction of the district-level people's Courts as provided for in Clause 1
and Clause 4 Article 35 of this Code;
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c)
Disputes and petitions prescribed in Clause 3, Article 35 of this Code.
2. The
People's Courts of provinces shall have the jurisdiction to resolve according
to first-instance procedures the civil cases falling under the jurisdiction of
the People's Courts of districts as provided for in Article 35 of this Code,
which are taken up by the People's Courts of provinces for settlement when
necessary or at the request of People’s Courts of districts.
Article 38. Jurisdiction of Specialized tribunals of
People’s Courts of provinces
1. Civil
tribunals of People’s Courts of provinces shall have the jurisdiction to:
a)
Resolve according to first-instance procedures the civil disputes/petitions
falling under the jurisdiction of People’s Courts of provinces specified in
Article 37 of this Code;
b)
Resolve according to appellate procedures the cases where the civil
judgments/decisions of People’s Courts of districts that are not legally
effective which are appealed against according to regulations in this Code.
2. Family
and juvenile tribunals of People’s Courts of provinces shall have the
jurisdiction to:
a)
Resolve according to first-instance procedures the disputes/petitions relating
to marriage and family falling under the jurisdiction of People’s Courts of
provinces specified in Article 37 of this Code;
b)
Resolve according to appellate procedures the cases where the
judgments/decisions relating to marriage and family of People’s Courts of
districts that are not legally effective which are appealed against according
to regulations in this Code.
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a)
Resolve according to first-instance procedures the disputes/petitions relating
to business and trade falling under the jurisdiction of People’s Courts of
provinces specified in Article 37 of this Code;
b)
Resolve according to appellate procedures the cases where the
judgments/decisions relating to business and trade of People’s Courts of
districts that are not legally effective are appealed against according to
regulations in this Code.
4. Labor
tribunals of People’s Courts of provinces shall have the jurisdiction to:
a)
Resolve according to first-instance procedures the labor disputes/petitions
falling under the jurisdiction of People’s Courts of provinces specified in
Article 37 of this Code;
b)
Resolve according to appellate procedures the cases where the labor
judgments/decisions of People’s Courts of districts that are not legally
effective which are appealed against according to regulations in this Code.
Article 39. Territorial jurisdiction of courts
1.
Territorial jurisdiction of Courts to settle civil lawsuits shall be determined
as follows:
a) The
Courts of the localities where the defendants reside or work, applicable to
defendants being individuals, or where the defendants are headquartered,
applicable to defendants being agencies or organizations, shall have the
jurisdiction to settle according to first-instance procedures for civil,
marriage- and family-related, business, trade or labor disputes prescribed in
Articles 26, 28, 30 and 32 of this Code;
b) The
involved parties shall have the right to agree with each other in writing to
petition the Courts of the localities where the plaintiffs reside or work,
applicable to plaintiffs being individuals, or where the plaintiffs are
headquartered, applicable to plaintiffs being agencies or organizations, to
settle civil, marriage and family-related, business, trade or labor disputes
prescribed in Articles 26, 28, 30 and 32 of this Code;
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2.
Territorial jurisdiction of Courts to settle civil matters shall be determined
as follows:
a) The
Courts of the areas where persons who are to be declared to be incapable of
civil acts or having limited capacity of exercise or having limited cognition
or behavior control reside or work shall have the jurisdiction to resolve such
petitions;
b) The
Courts of the areas where persons absent from their residential places are to
be announced for search or to be declared missing or dead reside for the last
time, shall have the jurisdiction to settle petitions for announcement of the
search for persons absent from their residential places and management of such
persons' properties or petitions for declaring a person missing or dead;
c) The
Courts of the areas where the persons petition to repeal the declaration of
being incapable of civil acts or having limited capacity of exercise or having
limited cognition or behavior control reside or work shall have the
jurisdiction to repeal such declaration.
The Court
which has issued a decision to declare a person missing or dead shall have the
jurisdiction to resolve petitions to revoke its decision;
d) The
Courts of the areas where the persons who are obliged to execute foreign
courts’ civil, marriage and family, business, trade, or labor judgments or
decisions reside or work, applicable to judgment debtors being individuals, or
where the judgment debtors are headquartered, applicable to judgment debtors
being agencies or organizations, or where exists the property relating to the
enforcement of such judgments or decisions of foreign courts, shall have the
jurisdiction to resolve petitions for recognition and enforcement of foreign
courts' civil, marriage and family, business, trade or labor judgments or
decisions in Vietnam;
dd) The
Courts of the areas where the petition senders reside or work, applicable to
individuals, or where the petition senders are headquartered, applicable to
agencies or organizations, shall have the jurisdiction to settle petitions for
non-recognition of foreign courts' civil, marriage and family, business, trade
or labor judgments or decisions, which are not requested to be enforced in
Vietnam;
e) The
Courts of the areas where the persons who are obliged to execute award of
foreign arbitrators reside or work, applicable to judgment debtors being
individuals, or where the judgment debtors are headquartered, applicable to
judgment debtors being agencies or organizations, or where exists the property
relating to the enforcement of foreign arbitrators' award, shall have the
jurisdiction to resolve the petitions for recognition and enforcement in
Vietnam the award of foreign arbitrators;
g) The
Courts of the areas where illegal marriages are registered shall have the
jurisdiction to resolve petitions to revoke such illegal marriages;
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i) The
Court of the area where one of the parties that petitions the Court to
recognize their agreement on change of post-divorce child custodian resides or
works shall have the jurisdiction to resolve that petition.
If the
agencies, organizations and individuals petition
for the
change of post-divorce child custodian, the Court where the child resides shall
have the jurisdiction to resolve that petition;
k) The
Court of the area where one parent of a minor child resides or works shall have
the jurisdiction to resolve a petition to restrict rights of the father or
mother towards the minor child or his/her right to see the child after the
divorce;
l) The
Court of the area where an adoptive parent or adopted child resides or works
shall have the jurisdiction to resolve a petition to terminate the child
adoption;
m) The
Courts of the area where notary organization which have performed notarization
are located shall have the jurisdiction to settle the petitions for declaration
of notarized documents to be invalid;
n) The
Courts of the localities where competent judgment-executing bodies are
headquartered or where exist properties related to the judgment enforcement
shall have the jurisdiction to settle petitions for determination of property
ownership or use rights and for division of common properties for judgment
enforcement and other petitions according to provisions of Law on enforcement
of civil judgments;
o) The
territorial jurisdiction of Courts to settle petitions related to the
settlement by Vietnamese commercial arbitrations of disputes shall comply with
the law on commercial arbitration;
p) The
Courts of the localities where a property is located shall have the
jurisdiction to resolve the petitions for recognition of such property to be
ownerless in Vietnam’s territory and the petition for recognition of the
ownership of the person who currently use such ownerless property;
q) The
Courts of the locality where a surrogate mother resides or works shall have the
jurisdiction to resolve petitions related to the surrogacy;
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s) The
Courts of the locality where the petitioner resides or works shall have the
jurisdiction to resolve petitions for recognition of the successful medication
at the Court;
t) The
Courts of the locality where the petitioner resides or works shall have the
jurisdiction to resolve the petitions for declaration of nullification of the
agreement on properties of spouses according to legislation on marriage and family; the
petitions for determination of father and mother for a child according to
legislation on marriage and family;
u) The
Courts of the locality where a headquarter of a enterprise is located shall
have the jurisdiction to resolve the petitions for cancellation of the
resolution of the Shareholder general assembly or a resolution of the Member
assembly;
v) The
Courts of the locality where a labor contract/collective bargaining agreement
is concluded shall have the jurisdiction to resolve the petitions for
declaration of such labor contract/collective bargaining agreement to be
invalid;
x) The
Courts of the locality where a strike occurs shall have the jurisdiction to
resolve the petitions for determination of the lawfulness of the strike;
y) The
territorial jurisdiction of the Courts in resolving the petition for arrest of
aircrafts/vessels shall comply with regulations in Article 421 of this Code.
3. If a
civil lawsuits has been accepted by a Court and is being resolved according to
regulations of this Code on the territorial jurisdiction of Courts but the residence,
headquarter or transaction place of the involved parties is changed, such civil
lawsuits shall be continuously resolved by that Court.
Article 40. Jurisdiction of Courts selected by plaintiffs
or petitioners
1. The
plaintiffs shall have the right to select Courts for resolution of civil,
marriage and family-related, business, trade or labor disputes in the following
cases:
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b) If the
dispute arises from the operation of a branch of an organization, the plaintiff
may petition the Court of the area where the organization's head-office is
located or where its branch is located to settle it;
c) If the
defendant does not have residence place, work place or head-office in Vietnam
or the case is related to disputes over alimonies, the plaintiff may petition
the Court of the area where he/she resides or works to settle the case;
d) If the
dispute is over compensation for non-contractual damage, the plaintiff may
petition the Court of the area where he/she resides, works or where his/her
headquarter is located or where the damage is caused to settle the case;
dd) If
the dispute is over compensation for damage or allowance upon termination of a
labor contract, over social insurance, the rights and/or interests in relation
to job, wages, income and other working conditions for the laborers, the
plaintiff being a laborer may petition the Court of the area where he/she
resides or works to settle it;
e) If the
dispute arises from the employment of labor by a sub-contractor or a mediator,
the plaintiff may petition the Court of the area where his/her actual employer
resides, works or is headquartered or where the sub-contractor or the mediator
resides or works to settle it;
g) If the
dispute arises from a contractual relation, the plaintiff may petition the
Court of the area where the contract is performed to settle the case;
h) If the
defendants reside, work or are headquartered in different places, the plaintiff
may petition the Court of the area where one of the defendants resides or works
or is headquartered to settle the case;
i) If the
dispute is over immovables which exist in different localities, the plaintiff
may request the Court of the area where one of such immovables exist to settle
the dispute.
2. The
petitioners may select Courts to settle their marriage and family-related
petitions in the following cases:
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b)
Regarding petitions for revocation of illegal marriages provided for in Clause
1 Article 29 of this Code, the requesters may ask the Courts of the areas where
an involved party of illegal marriage registration resides to resolve them;
c)
Regarding petitions for restriction of rights of fathers or mothers towards
their minor children or their right to visit the children after the divorces,
the petitioners may ask the Courts of the areas where the children reside to
resolve them.
Article 41. Transferring civil cases to other courts;
settlement of disputes over jurisdiction
1. If a
Court has accepted a civil case which does not fall within its jurisdiction, it
shall issue a decision to transfer the civil cases dossier to a competent Court
and cross out the civil cases in its acceptance book. Such decision must be
immediately sent to the Procuracy all involved parties and relevant agencies,
organizations and individuals.
The
involved parties and relevant agencies, organizations and individuals may make
complaints, the Procuracy may submit recommendation for such decision within 03
working days from the day on which the decision is received. Within 03 working
days from the day on which the complaint or the recommendation is received, the
Chief Justice of the Court that issued the decision to transfer the civil cases
must resolve the complaint/recommendation. The decision of the Chief Justice
shall be the final decision.
2.
Disputes over the jurisdiction of People’s Court of districts in the same province shall be
settled by the Chief Justice of the People’s Court of province.
3. Any
dispute over the jurisdiction between People's Courts of districts of different
provinces or between People's Courts of provinces that falls under the
territorial jurisdiction of the Collegial People’s Court shall be settled by
the Chief Justice of the High People's Court.
4. Any
dispute over the jurisdiction between People's Courts of districts of different
provinces or between People's Courts of provinces that falls under the
territorial jurisdiction of different Collegial People’s Courts shall be
settled by the Chief Justice of the Supreme People's Court.
Article 42. Joining or separating cases
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Regarding
cases where multiple persons filing the same petitions for lawsuits against the
same individuals or agencies/organizations, the Courts may gather their
petitions to resolve in the same cases.
2. A
Court may separate a case with different claims into two or more cases if the
separation and resolution of the separated cases strictly comply with law.
3. Upon
the case merger or separation prescribed in Clauses 1 and 2 of this Article,
the Courts which have accepted the petitions must issue decisions and send them
immediately to the procuracies of the same level, the involved parties and
relevant agencies, organizations and individuals.
Section 3. RESOLUTION OF CIVIL CASES WITHOUT LAW PROVISIONS
TO APPLY
Article 43. Rules for determining jurisdiction of Courts in
cases where there is no law provisions to apply
Jurisdiction
of Courts in acceptance and resolution of civil cases in cases where there is
no law provisions to apply shall comply with regulations in Article 35 to 41 of
this Code.
Article 44. Order, procedures for acceptance and resolution
of civil cases without law provisions to apply
Order and
procedures for acceptance and resolution of civil cases in cases where there is
no law provisions to apply shall comply with provisions of this Code.
Section 45. Rules for resolving civil cases without law
provisions to apply
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The
Courts shall apply custom to resolve civil cases when the involved parties do
not reach agreements on and the law does not provide for such cases. The custom
must not be contrary to basic rules of civil legislation specified in Article 3
of the Civil Code.
When
petitioning Courts to resolve civil cases, involved parties may adduce customs
to request the Courts to apply.
Courts
shall verify the applicability of the customs, ensuring the compliance with
provisions of Article 5 of the Civil Code.
If
involved parties adduce different customs, the ones accepted at the places
where the civil cases occur shall prevail.
2. The
application of law provisions in the same matters shall be conducted as
follows:
The
Courts shall apply law provisions applicable to the same matters to resolve
civil cases when the involved parties do not reach agreements on and the law
does not provide for such cases as prescribed in Article 5 of the Civil Code
and clause 1 of this Article.
When
applying law provisions applicable to the same matter, the Court shall
determine clearly the legal nature of the civil cases, determine clearly that
in current legal system there is no legal provisions cover such relationship
and determine legal provisions cover similar civil relationship.3. Basic rules
of civil law provisions, precedents and the justice shall be applied as
follows:
Courts
shall apply basic rules of civil law provisions, precedents and the justice to
settle civil cases when the application of law provisions applicable to the
same matters as prescribed in Article 5 and clause 1 Article 6 of the Civil
Code and clauses 1 and 2 of this Article is not available.
Basic
rules of civil law provisions are specified in Article 3 of the Civil Code.
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The
justice shall be determined on the basis of the reasons admitted by everyone,
conformable with the principle of being humanitarian, unbiased and equal in
rights and obligations of involved parties in such civil cases.
Chapter IV
CIVIL PROCEEDING AUTHORITIES, CIVIL
PROCEDURE -PRESIDING OFFICERS AND REPLACEMENT OF CIVIL PROCEDURE –PRESIDING
OFFICERS
Article 46. Civil proceeding authorities, proceeding
officers
1. The
civil proceeding authorities include:
a) The
Court;
b) The
Procuracy.
2. The
civil proceeding officers include:
a) The
Chief Justices, Judges, People’s Jurors, ombudspersons and Court clerks;
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Article 47. Tasks and powers of the courts' Chief Justices
1. The
court's Chief Justice shall have the following tasks and powers:
a) To
organize the resolution of civil cases falling under the jurisdiction of the
Court; ensuring the principle that the Judge and the Juror carry out the
adjudication separately and comply with law;
b) To
decide on the assignment of Judges to accept the civil cases, Judges to resolve
civil cases, People’s Jurors to participate in trial panels to hear civil
lawsuits; and to decide on the assignment of ombudspersons, Court clerks to
conduct procedures for civil cases, ensuring the principle prescribed in clause
2 Article 16 of this Code;
c) To
decide on the replacement of Judges, People’s Jurors, Ombudspersons and/or
Court clerks before the opening of Court sessions;
d) To
decide on the replacement of expert-witnesses and/or interpreters before the
opening of Court sessions;
dd) To
issue decisions and conduct civil proceedings under the provisions of this
Code;
e) To
settle complaints and/or denunciations under the provisions of this Code;
g) To
file appeals according to the cassation or reopening procedures against
legally-effective Court judgments or decisions according to the provisions of
this Code or request the competent Chief Justice to consider the appeal
according to the cassation or reopening procedures against legally-effective
Court judgments or decisions.
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i) To
resolve the acts obstructing the civil procedures as prescribed in law;
k) To
perform the tasks and powers prescribed in law.
2. When
the Chief Justice is absent, a Deputy-Chief Justice shall be authorized by the
Chief Justice to perform the Chief Justice's tasks and powers, excluding the
right to file appeals prescribed in point g Clause 1 of this Article. The
Deputy-Chief Justice shall be answerable to the Chief Justice for the
authorized tasks and powers.
Article 48. Tasks and powers of Judges
As assigned
by the Court’s Chief Justice, the Judges shall have the following tasks and
powers:
1. To
proceed the application for initiating lawsuits and the petitions and accept
the civil cases according to regulations in this Code;
2. To
file the dossier of civil cases;
3. To
collect and verify the evidence, to hold Court sessions and meetings to resolve
civil cases according to regulations in this Code;
4. To
decide to apply, change or cancel the provisional emergency measures;
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6. To
provide explanation and guidance for involved parties so that they can exercise
the right to apply for legal assistant according to law on legal assistance;
7. To
hold meetings for checking the handover of, access to and disclosure of
evidences and mediating and issue decisions on recognition of the agreements
between involved parties according to provisions of this Code;
8. To
decide to bring civil lawsuits to Court for trial, or bring civil matters for
resolution;
9. To
convene people to a trial or a meeting;
10. To
work as the chairperson or to participate in adjudicating civil lawsuits and
resolving civil matters;11. To request the Court’s Chief Justice to assign
ombudspersons to assist the conduct of civil proceedings according to the
provisions of this Code;
12. To
discover and request the Court’s Chief Justice to request competent agencies to
consider amending or repealing a legislative document discovered denoting
against constitutions, laws, resolutions of National Assembly, ordinances,
resolutions of the Standing committee of the National Assembly, superior
legislative documents of regulatory agencies as prescribed in this Code;
13. To
resolve the acts obstructing the civil procedures as prescribed in law;
14. To
conduct other proceedings when resolving civil cases according to the
provisions of this Code.
Article 49. Tasks and powers of People’s Jurors
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1. To
study case files prior to the opening of Court sessions;
2. To
request the Chief Justices and/or Judges to issue necessary decisions according
to their respective competence;
3. To
participate in the trial panel of civil lawsuits;
4. To
conduct proceedings and take equal power to the Judge in voting on issues
falling within the trial panels' jurisdiction.
Article 50. Tasks and powers of ombudspersons
As
assigned by the Court’s Chief Justice, the inspectors shall have the following
tasks and powers:
1. To
conduct inspection of dossiers of civil cases subject to reconsideration in
court’s judgments and decisions according to the cassation or reopening
procedures.
2. To
make conclusion about the inspection and the inspection results and propose
solutions for the civil cases to the Court’s Chief Justice;
3. To
collect materials and evidences relevant to the civil cases as prescribed in
this Code;
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5. To
conduct other tasks according to the provisions of this Code.
Article 51. Tasks and powers of Court clerks
As
assigned by the Court’s Chief Justice, the Court clerks shall have the
following tasks and powers:
1. To
make necessary professional preparations prior to the opening of Court
sessions;
2. To
announce the rules of Court sessions;
3. To
check and report to the trial panels the list of those summoned to Court
sessions;
4. To
write up a minute of the Court session, the meeting and the minute of
statements of the involved parties in the civil procedures;
5. To
conduct other tasks according to the provisions of this Code.
Article 52. Cases where proceeding officers must refuse to
conduct the procedures or be replaced
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1. They
are concurrently the involved parties, the representatives or relatives of the
involved parties;
2. They
have participated in the proceedings in the capacity as defense counsels of the
legitimate rights and interests of involved parties, witnesses,
expert-witnesses or interpreters in the same case;
3. There
are clear grounds to believe that they may not be impartial in performing their
tasks.
Article 53. Replacing Judges or People’s Jurors
Judges
and/or People’s Jurors must refuse to conduct the civil procedures or be
replaced in the following cases:
1. In one
of the cases prescribed in Article 52 of this Code;
2. They
are in the same trial panel and have a close relationship with one another; in
this case, only one person is allowed to participate in the civil procedures;
3. They
participated in first-instance, appellate, cassation or reopening procedures in
the resolution of such civil cases and have issued first-instance judgments,
appellate judgments/decisions, cassation or reopening decisions, civil matter
resolving decisions, decisions to terminate the resolution of civil cases or
decisions to recognize the agreement between involved parties; if such persons
are members of the Council of Judges of the Supreme People’s Court or
Committees of Judges of Collegial People’s Courts, they shall be allowed to
participate in the resolution of such cases according to cassation/reopening
procedures;
4. They
have acted as proceeding officers in such cases in the capacity as the
ombudsperson, the Court clerk, the prosecutor or the inspector.
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Court
clerks and ombudspersons must refuse to conduct civil procedures or be replaced
in the following cases:
1. In one
of the cases prescribed in Article 52 of this Code;
2. They
have acted as proceeding officers in such cases in the capacity as the Judge,
People’s Jurors, ombudsperson, the Court clerk, the prosecutor or the
inspector;
3. They
are relatives of one of other proceeding officers in the case.
Article 55. Procedures for refusal to conduct the civil
proceedings and procedures for request for replacement of Judges, People’s
Jurors, Ombudspersons, Court clerks
1. The
refusal to conduct the civil proceedings and the request for the replacement of
the Judges, People’s Jurors, Ombudspersons, Court clerks before the opening of
Court sessions/meetings must be made in writing, clearly stating the reason(s)
and grounds therefor.
2. The
refusal to conduct the civil proceedings and the request for the replacement of
persons specified in clause 1 of this Article in Court sessions/meetings must
be recorded in the minutes of the meetings.
Article 56. Decision on the replacement of Judges, People’s
Jurors, Ombudspersons and/or Court clerks
1. Before
the opening of Court sessions, the replacement of Judges, People's Jurors,
Ombudspersons and/or Court clerks shall be decided by the Chief Justice. If the
to be-replaced Judge is the court’s Chief Justice, the competence to decide
shall be adjusted as follows:
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b) The
replacement of Judges being Chief Justice of People’s Courts of provinces shall
be decided by the Chief Justices of Collegial People’s Courts having
territorial competence towards such People’s Courts of provinces;
c) The
replacement of Judges being Chief Justice of Collegial People’s Courts shall be
decided by the Chief Justices of Supreme People’s Courts.
2. In
Court sessions, the replacement of Judges, People’s Jurors, Ombudspersons or
Court clerks shall be decided by the trial panels after listening to the
opinions of the persons requested to be replaced. The trial panels shall
discuss matters in the deliberation rooms and make decisions by majority. The
decision on postponement of the Court session for the replacement of Judges,
People’s Jurors, ombudspersons and/or Court clerks shall be decided by the
trial panels. The appointment of other Judges, People’s Jurors, ombudspersons
and/or Court clerks as the replacement shall be decided by the courts' Chief Justices.
If the to be-replaced person is the court’s Chief Justice, the competence to
decide shall conform to regulations in clause 1 of this Article.
3. The
replacement of Judges and/or Court Clerks when processing the civil matters
shall comply with regulations in clause 1 and clause 2 Article 368 of this
Code.
4. Within
03 working days from the day on which the Court session/meeting is postponed,
the court’s Chief Justice shall assign the replacing persons.
Article 57. Tasks and powers of procuracy chairpersons
1. When
supervising the law observance in the civil proceedings, the procuracy
chairperson shall have the following tasks and powers:
a) To
organize and direct the work of supervising law observance in civil
proceedings;
b) To
decide on assignment of procurators to supervise law observance in civil
proceedings, to participate in Court sessions for adjudication of civil
lawsuits, sessions/meetings for resolution of civil matters according to the
provisions of this Code; to decide on assignment of inspectors to carry out the
civil procedures for civil cases, ensuring the principle specified in clause 2
Article 16 of this Code;
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d) To appeal according
to appellate, cassation or reopening procedures against Courts judgments or
decisions according to the provisions of this Code;
dd) To
make requests, proposals according to regulations in this Code;
e) To
settle complaints and/or denunciations under the provisions of this Code;
g) To
perform the tasks and powers prescribed in law.
2. When
the Procuracy Chairperson is absent, a deputy-procuracy chairperson shall be
authorized by the Chairperson to perform his/her tasks and powers, except for
the power prescribed in point d clause 1 of this Article. The Deputy-procuracy
chairperson shall be answerable to the procuracy chairperson for the authorized
tasks and powers.
Article 58. Tasks and powers of procurators
When
assigned by the procuracy chairperson to supervise the law observance in civil
proceedings, the procurators shall have the following tasks and powers:
1. To
investigate the return of the petition;
2. To
investigate the acceptance and resolution of civil cases;
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4. To
attend Court sessions/meetings and express opinions of procuracies about the
resolution of cases according to provisions of this Code;
5. To
inspect judgments/decisions of courts;
6. To
request Courts to conducted procedural activities as provided for in this Code;
7. To
request competent Chairpersons of procuracy to appeal against
judgments/decisions of Courts that is contrary to law;
8. To
control the procedural activities of participants; to request competent agencies and
organizations to handled violations of participants in procedures against law;
9. To
perform other civil procedural tasks and powers falling within competence of
procuracies as prescribed in this Code.
Article 59. Tasks and powers of inspectors
When
assigned to conduct the civil procedures, the inspectors shall have the
following tasks and powers:
1. To
study the case files and report the results to procurators;
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3. To
assist procurators to conduct inspection of the compliance with law provisions
in civil procedures.
Article 60. Replacement of procurators/inspectors
Procurators/inspectors
must refuse to conduct civil procedures or be replaced in the following cases:
1. In one
of the cases prescribed in Article 52 of this Code;
2. They
have acted as proceeding officers in such cases in the capacity as the Judge,
People’s Jurors, ombudsperson, the Court clerk, the prosecutor or the
inspector.
Article 61. Procedures for refusal to conduct the civil
proceedings and procedures for request for replacement of the
procurators/inspectors
1. Before
the opening of Court sessions, the refusal to conduct the civil proceedings and
the request for the replacement of the procurators must be made in writing,
clearly stating the reason(s) and grounds therefor.
The
refusal to conduct the civil proceedings and the request for the replacement of
the inspectors must be made in writing, clearly stating the reason(s) and
grounds therefor.
2. At the
Court session, the refusal to conduct the procedures or the request for the
replacement of the procurators must be recorded in the minutes of the Court
sessions.
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1. Prior
to the opening of Court sessions, the replacement of procurators shall be
decided by the chairpersons of the procuracies of the same level; if the to
be-replaced procurators are procuracy chairpersons, their replacement shall be
decided by the chairpersons of the immediate superior procuracies.
The
replacement of the inspectors shall be decided by the procuracy chairpersons at
the same level.
2. In
Court sessions, the replacement of procurators shall be decided by the trial
panels after listening to the opinions of the to be-replaced persons. The trial
panels shall discuss matters in the deliberation rooms and make decisions by
majority.
The
decision on postponement of the Court session for the replacement of
procurators shall be decided by the trial panels. The appointment of
procurators as the replacement shall be decided by the chairpersons of the
procuracies of the same level. If the to be-replaced procurators are
chairpersons of the procuracies, their replacement shall be decided by the
chairpersons of the immediate superior procuracies.
3. The
replacement of procurators when processing the civil matters shall comply with regulations in clause
3 Article 368 of this Code.
4. Within
03 working days from the day on which the Court session/meeting is postponed,
the procuracy chairperson shall assign the replacing persons and send the Court
a written notification.
Chapter V
COMPOSITION OF PANELS FOR RESOLUTION OF
CIVIL CASES
Article 63. Panel for first-instance trial over civil
lawsuits
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If the
case involves minor people, People’s Jurors being people who are working at
Communist Youth Union of Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam Women’s Union, family affair
authorities, children affair authorities must participate in the first-instance
trial panel.
Regarding
labor cases, People’s Jurors being people who have worked or are working in a
employee collective’s representative organization or people having knowledge in
labor law shall participate in the first instance trial panel.
Article 64. Panel for appellate trial over civil lawsuits
The panel
for appellate trial over civil lawsuits shall be composed of three Judges,
except for cases specified in Article 65 of this Code.
Article 65. Adjudication of civil lawsuits under simplified
procedures
The
first-instance trial, appellate trial procedures for civil lawsuits under
simplified procedures shall be conducted by one Judge.
Article 66. Panel for cassation or reopening trial over
civil lawsuits
1. The
Committee of Judges of Collegial People’s Court shall carry out the cassation
or reopening trial through a trial panel including 3 Judges or the whole of the
Committee of Judges of Collegial People’s Court.
2. The
Council of Judges of the Supreme People’s Court shall carry out the cassation
or reopening trial through a trial panel including 5 Judges or all of Judges of
the Supreme People’s Court.
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1. The
civil, marriage and family, business, trade or labor petitions prescribed in
Clause 5 of Article 27, Clause 9 of Article 29, Clauses 4 and 5 of Article 31,
and clauses 2, 3 and 4 Article 34 of this Code or the appeals against civil
matter-settling decisions shall be settled by a board of three Judges.
2. The
civil, marriage and family, business, trade or labor petitions which do not
fall within the cases prescribed in Clause 1 of this Article shall be settled
by one Judge.
3.
Arrangement for resolution of business or trade petitions prescribed in Clause
2, Article 31 of this Code shall comply with law regulations on commercial
arbitration.
Chapter VI
PARTICIPANTS IN CIVIL PROCEDURES
Section 1. INVOLVED PARTIES IN civil cases
Article 68. Involved parties in civil cases
1. The
involved parties in civil lawsuits are agencies, organizations and individuals,
including the plaintiffs, the defendants and the persons with related interests
and obligations.
The
involved parties in civil matters are agencies, organizations and individuals,
including the persons petitioning settlement of civil matters and persons with
related interests and obligations.
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Agencies
and organizations prescribed by this Code, which initiate civil lawsuits to
request Courts to protect the public interests, the State's interests in the
domains under their respective charges are also plaintiffs.
3. The
defendant in a civil lawsuit is the person against whom the plaintiff initiates
a lawsuit or the other agencies, organizations and individuals prescribed by
this Code initiates a lawsuit to request the Court to resolve the civil lawsuit
when they holds that the legitimate rights and interests of the plaintiff have
been infringed upon by such person.
4. The
persons with related interests and/or obligations in civil lawsuits are those
who neither initiate lawsuits nor are sued, but the resolution of the civil
lawsuits is related to their interests and/or obligations and, therefore they
themselves, or other involved parties, request to include them in the
proceedings in the capacity as the persons with related interests and/or
obligations and such requests are accepted by courts.
Where
the resolution of a civil lawsuit is related to the interests and/or obligations
of a person but no one requests to include him or her in the proceedings in the
capacity as the persons with related interests and/or obligations, the Court
shall have to include that person in the proceedings in the capacity as the
person with related interests and/or obligations.
5. The
persons petitioning the resolution of civil matters are those who petition the
Court to or not to recognize a legal event to form the basis for the arising of
rights and/or obligations relating to civil issues, marriage and family,
business, trade and labor of themselves or of other agencies, organizations and
individuals; and/or petition the Court to recognize their rights and/or
obligations relating to civil issues, marriage and family, business, trade,
labor.
6. The
persons with related interests and/or obligations in civil matters are those
who do not petition the resolution of civil matters, but the resolution of the
civil matters is related to their interests and/or obligations and, therefore
they themselves, or other involved parties in the civil matters, request to
include them in the proceedings in the capacity as the persons with related
interests and/or obligations and such requests are accepted by the Courts.
Where the
resolution of a civil matter is related to the interests and/or obligations of
a person but no one requests to include him or her in the proceedings in the
capacity as the persons with related interests and/or obligations, the Court
shall have to include that person in the proceedings in the capacity as the
person with related interests and/or obligations.
Article 69. The involved parties' civil procedure law
capacity and civil procedure act capacity
1. The
civil procedure law capacity means the capability to have the law-prescribed
rights and obligations in civil procedures. Every agencies, organizations and
individuals shall have the same civil procedure law capacity in petitioning the
Court to protect his/her/its legitimate rights and interests.
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3. The
involved parties being persons aged full 18 years or older shall have full
civil procedure act capacity, except for legally incapacitated person or except
otherwise provided for by law.
Regarding
persons with limited capacity of exercise, people with limited cognition or
behavior control, their civil procedure act capacity shall be determined
according to the decision of the Court.
4. The
involved parties being persons aged under 6 years or persons losing their civil
act capacity shall not have the civil procedure act capacity. The exercise of
the civil proceeding rights and/or obligations of such persons, the protection
of the legitimate rights and interests of such persons at Courts shall be
performed by their lawful representatives.
5. For
the involved parties being persons aged between full 6 and under 15 years, the
protection of their civil proceeding rights and/or obligations and the
protection of legitimate rights and interests of such persons at Courts shall
be performed by their lawful representatives.
Regarding
persons with limited capacity of exercise, people with limited cognition or
behavior control, their civil procedure act rights and/or obligations and the
protection of their legitimate rights and interests shall be determined
according to the decision of the Court.
6. The
involved parties being persons aged between full 15 years and under 18 years,
who have worked under labor contracts or involved in civil transactions with
their own properties shall have the right to participate in civil procedures
themselves regarding matters related to such labor or civil relations. In such cases,
the Court shall have the right to summon their lawful representatives to
participate in the procedures. For other matters, the exercise of the civil
proceeding rights and/or obligations of such persons at Courts shall be
performed by their lawful representatives.
7. The
involved parties being agencies, organizations shall participate in civil
procedures through their lawful representatives.
Article 70. Rights and obligations of the involved parties
The
involved parties shall have equal rights and obligations when participating in
civil procedures. When participating in civil procedures, the involved parties
shall have the following rights and obligations:
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2. To
advance Court fees and charges and pay Court fees and charges and other
expenses as prescribed by law;
3. To
provide sufficiently and accurately address of their residence/work place;
during the resolution of cases, any change of address of residence/workplace
shall be promptly notified other involved parties and the Court;
4. To
maintain, modify, supplement or withdraw their petitions in accordance with
this Code;
5. To
supply materials and evidences; to prove to protect their legitimate rights and
interests;
6. To
petition agencies, organizations and individuals that are keeping or managing
materials and evidences to supply such materials and evidences to them;
7. To
petition the Court to verify and collect materials and evidences of the cases
which they cannot perform themselves; petition the Court to request other
involved parties to present materials and evidences they are keeping; petition
the Court to issue the decision to request the agencies, organizations and
individuals that are keeping and managing the materials/evidences to supply
such materials and evidences; request the Court to summon witnesses, to ask for
expertise, evaluation or price appraisal;
8. To
read and take notes, make photocopies of materials and evidences produced by
other involved parties or collected by courts, except for materials and
evidences specified in clause 2 Article 109 of this Code;
9. To
send other involved parties or their lawful representatives photocopies of the
petition and materials and evidences, excluding evidences and materials that
other involved parties have been provided with as prescribed in clause 2
Article 109 of this Code.
For cases
where the photocopies of lawsuit petition, materials and evidences cannot be
made due to good and sufficient reasons, they may request the Court to assist;
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11. To
reach agreement with one another on the resolution of cases: to participate in
mediation conducted by courts;
12. To
receive regular notices for the exercise of their rights and obligations;
13. To
protect by themselves or ask other persons to protect their legitimate rights
and interests;
14. To
petition the replacement of civil proceeding officers or participants in civil
procedures in accordance with this Code;
15. To
participate in the Court sessions according to the provisions of this Code;
16. To be
present according to Court summons and abide by Court decisions during the
settlement of their cases;
17. To ask
the Courts to summon persons with related interests and obligations to
participate in civil procedures;
18. To
ask Courts to suspend the settlement of their cases in accordance with this
Code;
19. To
make questions to other persons on matters related to the cases or to propose
to Courts matters which need to be questioned on other persons; to confront
each other or witnesses;
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21. To be
provided with extracts of Court judgments, judgments or decisions;
22. To
appeal against or complain about Court judgments or decisions in accordance
with Code;
23. To
ask competent persons to appeal according to cassation or reopening procedures against
legally effective judgments or decisions of courts;
24. To
strictly abide by legally effective judgments or decisions of courts;
25. To
enjoy rights of involved parties in a way that such rights are not misused to
obstruct the procedures of Courts and/or other involved parties; to bear the
consequences prescribed by this Code if failing to fulfill obligations;
26. To
have other rights and obligations prescribed by law.
Article 71. Rights and obligations of the plaintiffs
1. The
involved parties' rights and obligations prescribed in Article 70 of this Code.
2. To
modify the contents of lawsuit claims; withdraw part or whole of their lawsuit
claims.
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Article 72. Rights and obligations of the defendants
1. The
involved parties' rights and obligations prescribed in Article 70 of this Code.
2. To be
notified by Courts of the lawsuits against them.
3. To
agree or disagree with part or whole of the claims of the plaintiff, persons
with related interests and/or obligations who have independent claims.
4. To
make counter-claims against the plaintiffs if they are related to the
plaintiffs' claims or set off the obligations claimed by the plaintiffs. For
counter-claims, the defendants shall have the plaintiffs' rights and
obligations prescribed in Article 71 of this Code.
5. To
make independent claims for persons with relevant interests and/or obligations
and such claims shall relevant to the lawsuit settlement. For independent
claims, the defendants shall have the plaintiffs' rights and obligations
prescribed in Article 71 of this Code.
6. If the
counter-claims or the independent claims are not accepted by the Court to be
resolved in the same case, the defendant may initiate another lawsuit.
Article 73. Rights and obligations of the persons with
related interests and/or obligations
1.
Persons with related interests and/or obligations shall have the following
rights and obligations:
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b) To be
allowed to make independent claims or participate in the procedures on the side
of the plaintiffs or the defendants.
2. If the
persons with related interests and obligations make independent claims and such
independent claims are related to the lawsuit settlement, they shall have the
plaintiffs' rights and obligations prescribed in Article 71 of this Code. If
different independent claims are not accepted by the Court to be resolved in
the same case, the persons with related interests and/or obligations may
initiate another lawsuit.
3. If the
persons with related interests and/or obligations participate in the procedures
on the side of the plaintiff or only have interests, they shall have the
plaintiffs' rights and obligations prescribed in Article 71 of this Code.
4. If the
persons with related interests and/or rights participate in the procedures on
the side of the defendants or only have obligations, they shall have the
defendants' rights and obligations prescribed in Article 72 of this Code.
Article 74. Inheritance of procedural rights and
obligations.
1. Where
the involved parties being individuals die while participating in the procedures
and their property rights and obligations are inherited, their heirs shall
participate in the procedures.
2. Where
the involved parties being agencies or organizations have to terminate their
operations or to be dissolved, consolidated, merged, divided, separated or
organizationally transformed while participating in the procedures, the
inheritance of their procedural rights and obligations shall be determined as
follows:
a) Where
the organizations that have to terminate their operations or to be dissolved
are joint-stock companies, limited liability companies or partnerships, the
individuals and/or organizations being members of such organizations or their
lawful representatives shall participate in the procedures;
b) Where
the agencies, organizations that have to terminate their operations or to be
dissolved are regulatory agencies, people's armed force units, political
organizations, socio-political organizations, professional and socio-political
organizations, social organizations, socio-professional organizations or
state-owned enterprises, the lawful representatives of the superior agencies of
such agencies/organizations or the lawful representatives of the
agencies/organizations which take over the former's rights and obligations
shall participate in the procedures;
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3. Where
the owners of the organizations are changed and the rights and obligations are
transferred to the new owners, the new owners shall inherit the procedural
rights and obligations.
4. Where
the organizations received the rights and obligations according to civil law
provisions, such organizations shall inherit the procedural rights and
obligation.
5. Where
the organizations other than legal persons participate in the procedures but
their representatives or managers die, such organizations shall have to appoint
other persons as their representatives to participate in the procedures; if
such organizations fail to appoint representatives or have to terminate their
operations or to be dissolved, the individuals being members of such
organizations shall participate in the procedures.
Section 2. OTHER PARTICIPANTS IN THE PROCEDURES
Article 75. Defense counsels of involved parties'
legitimate rights and interests
1. The
defense counsels of involved parties' legitimate rights and interests are
persons who participate in the procedures to protect the involved parties'
legitimate rights and interests.
2. The
following persons can act as defense counsels of the involved parties
legitimate rights and interests when they were asked by the involved parties
and have been accepted by Courts to participate in the procedures to protect
the involved parties’ legitimate rights and interests:
a)
Lawyers who participate in the procedures under the provisions of the
legislation on lawyers;
b) Legal
aid officers or persons participating in legal aid under the law on legal aid;
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d) Vietnamese
citizens who have full civil act capacity, have clean criminal records or have
been expunged convictions, who do not fall into the cases subject to the
application of administrative handling measures; who are not cadres or civil
servants in the Court or procuracy sector, officers or non-commissioned
officers in the public security force.
3. The
defense counsels of the involved parties' legitimate rights and interests can
defend the legitimate rights and interests of more than one involved party in
the same case, if those persons' legitimate rights and interests do not
conflict each other. Many defense counsels of the involved parties' legitimate
rights and interests may jointly defend the legitimate rights and interests of
one involved party in a case.
4. When
applying the Court to carry out the registration procedure for defense counsels
of involved parties’ legitimate rights and interests, the applicant shall
present the following papers:
a) The
lawyers shall present papers according to regulations in the Law on lawyers;
b) Legal
aid officers or persons participating in legal aid under the law on legal aid
shall present the written appointment for legal aid issued by the organizations
providing legal aid and the cards of legal aids or lawyer’s card;
c)
Representatives of employee collective’s representative organization shall
present the writing that such organizations have appointed them to defend the
legitimate rights and interests of the employees/collective labor;
d)
Vietnamese citizens satisfying conditions specified in point d clause 2 of this
Article shall present the written petitions of the involved parties and their
identity papers.
5. After
checking papers, if the applicant is satisfactory to act as the defense counsel
of the involved parties’ legitimate rights and interests as prescribed in
clauses 2, 3 and 4 of this Article, within 03 working days from the day on
which the application is received, the Court shall record to the register the
defense counsel of the involved parties’ legitimate rights and interests and
shall certify the application for defense counsels of the involved parties. If
the application is rejected, the Court shall send the applicant a written
notification containing the explanation.
Article 76. Rights and obligations of defense counsels of
the involved parties' legitimate rights and interests
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2. To
collect and supply materials and evidences to courts; to study case files and
to take notes, to copy necessary materials in the case files in order to defend
the legitimate rights and interests of the involved parties, except for
materials and evidences specified in clause 2 Article 109 of this Code.
3. To
participate in mediation, Court sessions or make their written defense of the
legitimate rights and interests of the involved parties to Courts for
consideration.
4. To
petition on behalf of the involved parties the replacement of proceeding
officers and/or other procedure participants according to the provisions of
this Code.
5. To
provide involved parties with legal aid related to the defense of their
legitimate rights and interests; if they are authorized by the involved parties,
they shall receive the papers and procedural documents that are transmitted or
notified by the Court on behalf of the involved parties and shall give then to
the involved parties.
6. To
comply with rights and obligations specified in clauses 1, 6, 16, 17, 18, 19
and 20 of Article 70 of this Code.
7. To
have other rights and obligations prescribed by law.
Article 77. Witnesses
Persons
who know details related to the contents of cases may be summoned by Courts at
the request of the involved parties to participate in the procedures in the
capacity as witnesses. Persons who lose their civil act capacity cannot act as
witnesses.
Article 78. Rights and obligations of witnesses
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2. To
honestly declare details they know, which are related to the resolution of
cases.
3. To
refuse to make declarations if their declarations are related to State secrets,
professional secrets, business secrets, personal secrets, family secrets or
such declarations adversely affect or harm the involved parties being their
close relatives.
4. To be
off duty while the Courts summon them or take their testimonies, if they work
in agencies or organizations.
5. To be
paid related expenses according to law provisions.
6. To
petition the Courts which have summoned them and competent agencies to protect
their lives, health, honor, dignity, properties and other legitimate rights and
interests when participating in the procedures; to complain about procedural
acts of proceeding officers.
7. To
compensate and take legal responsibility for damage caused to the involved
parties or other persons by their untruthful testimonies.
8. To be
present at courts, Court sessions/meetings under the court's summon of the
Courts if the witness's testimony must be given publicly at courts, Court
sessions/meetings; where witnesses fail to show up in Court sessions/meetings
without good and sufficient reasons and their absence obstruct the adjudication/resolution,
the Judges, the trial panels or the civil matter resolution council may issue
decisions to escort them to Court sessions/meetings, unless the witnesses are
minors.
9. To
make commitments before Courts to perform their rights and obligations, except
for cases where the witnesses are minors.
Article 79. Expert-witnesses
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Article 80. Rights and obligations of expert-witnesses
1.
Expert-witnesses shall have the following rights and obligations:
a) To
read documents in the case files which are related to the to be-expertised
objects; to petition Courts to provide documents necessary for the expertise;
b) To
question participants in legal procedures about matters related to the to be -
expertised objects;
c) To be
present under the courts' summons; present, explain and answer questions
related to the expertise and expertising conclusions in an honest,
well-grounded and objective manner;
d) To
notify the Courts in writing of the impossibility to conduct the expertise as
the matters needed to be expertised go beyond their professional capability
and/or the documents supplied in service of the expertising are inadequate or
unusable;
dd) To
preserve the received documents and return them to Courts together with their
expertising conclusions or with the notices on impossibility to conduct
expertise;
e) Not to
arbitrarily collect materials for conducting the expertise nor to contact other
participants in the procedures if such contacts effect the expertising results;
not to disclose secret information they know while conducting the expertise nor
to inform the expertising results to other persons, except for the Judges who
decide to request the expertise;
g) To be
paid related expenses according to law provisions;
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2.
Expert-witnesses must refuse to take the job or be replaced in the following
cases:
a) They
fall into one of the cases prescribed in Clauses 1 and 3 of Article 52 of this
Code or Article 34 of the Law on judicial expertise;
b) They
have participated in the procedures in the capacity as defense counsels of the
legitimate rights and interests of the involved parties, as witnesses or
interpreters in the same case;
c) They
have acted as proceeding officers in such cases in the capacity as the Judge,
People’s Jurors, ombudsperson, the Court clerk, the prosecutor or the
inspector.
Article 81. Interpreters
1.
Interpreters are persons capable of translating a foreign language into
Vietnamese and vice versa in cases where procedure participants are unable to
use Vietnamese. Interpreters shall be selected by an involved party or under
the agreement between involved parties and are accepted or requested by courts.
2. People
who understand language of disabled persons or can use language of disabled
people are also considered interpreters.
Where
only representatives or relatives of disabled persons can understand and use
their language, such representatives or relatives may be accepted by Courts to
act as interpreters for such disabled persons.
Article 82. Rights and obligations of interpreters
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a) To be
present under courts' summons;
b) To
interpret truthfully, objectively and accurately;
c) To
request proceeding officers and/or participants to additionally explain their
words which need to be interpreted;
d) Not to
contact other procedure participants if such contacts affect the truthfulness,
objectiveness and accuracy of their interpretation;
dd) To be
paid related expenses according to law provisions;
e) To
make commitments before Courts to perform their rights and obligations.
2.
Interpreters must refuse to take the job or be replaced in the following cases:
a) They
fall into one of the cases prescribed in Clauses 1 and 3 of Article 52 of this
Code;
b) They
have participated in the proceedings in the capacity as defense counsels of the
legitimate rights and interests of involved parties, witnesses or
expert-witnesses in the same case;
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Article 83. Procedures for refusing to give expertise
opinions or interpretations or requesting the replacement of expert-witnesses
or interpreters.
1. The
refusal to give expertise opinions or interpretations or the request for
replacement of expert-witnesses or interpreters prior to the opening of Court
sessions must be made in writing, clearly stating the reasons therefor.
2. The
refusal to give expertise opinions or interpretations or the request for
replacement of expert-witnesses or interpreters in Court sessions must be
recorded in the minutes of the Court sessions.
Article 84. Deciding on replacement of expert-witnesses,
interpreters
1. Prior
to the opening of Court sessions, the replacement of expert-witnesses and/or
interpreters shall be decided by courts' Chief Justices.
2. In the
Court session, the replacement of the expert-witnesses and/or interpreters
shall be decided by the Judges, Trial panels, civil matter-resolving councils
after listening to the to be-replaced persons. The trial panels and the civil
matter-resolving councils shall discuss matters in the deliberation rooms and
make decisions by majority.
Where
expert-witnesses or interpreters must be replaced, the Judges, the Trial panels
or the Civil matter-resolving council shall issue decisions to postpone the
Court sessions. The request for other expert-witnesses or interpreters shall
comply with the provisions of Articles 79 and 81 of this Code.
Article 85. Representatives
1. The
representatives in civil procedures comprise the representatives at law and the
proxy representatives. The representatives can be individuals or legal entities
as defined in Civil Code
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Agencies,
organizations and individuals that initiate lawsuit to protect the legitimate
rights and interests of others shall also be the representatives at law of the
protected persons in the civil procedures.
3.
Employee collective’s representative organizations shall be lawful
representatives of collective of employees initiating lawsuits over labor
cases, participate in procedures at Courts when legitimate rights and interests
of the collective of employees are infringed upon; employee collective’s
representative organizations are in charge of representing employees in
initiating lawsuits over labor cases and participate in procedures when being
authorized by employees.
If multiple
employees filing the same claim towards the employer of the same
enterprise/unit, such employees may authorize a representative from the
employee collective’s representative organization to represent them in
initiating lawsuits over labor cases and participate in procedures at the
Court.
4. The
proxy representatives as defined in the Civil Code shall be the proxy
representatives in the civil procedures.
For the
divorce, the involved parties must not designate any other persons to
participate in the procedure on their behalf. If parents or other relatives of
the involved parties petition the Courts to resolve the divorce cases as
prescribed in clause 2 Article 51 of the Law on marriage and family, they such
be the representatives.
Article 86. Rights and obligations of representatives
1. The
representatives at law in civil procedures shall exercise the procedural rights
and obligations of the involved parties within the scope they represent.
2. The
proxy representatives in civil procedures shall exercise the procedural rights
and obligations of the involved parties according to the written authorization.
Article 87. Cases of disallowance to act as representatives
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a) They
are also the involved parties in the same case with the represented persons
where their legitimate rights and interests are contrary to those of the
represented persons;
b) They
are acting as representatives at law in civil procedures for other involved
parties whose legitimate rights and interests are contrary to those of the
represented persons in the same case.
2. The
provisions in Clause 1 of this Article shall also apply to the case of proxy
representatives in civil procedures.
3.
Officials or employees in the court, procuracy or police sectors must not act
as representatives in civil procedures, except for cases where they participate
in civil procedures in the capacity as representatives of their agencies or as
representatives at law.
Article 88. Appointing representatives in civil procedures
1. While
civil procedures are conducted, if any involved party is the minor persons,
legally incapacitated persons, persons with limited capacity of exercise,
persons with limited cognition or behavior control but has no representative or
his/her representative at law falls into one of the cases specified in Clause
1, Article 87 of this Code, the Court must appoint the representative to
participate in the proceedings at courts.
2. In
labor cases where involved parties are those specified in clause 1 of this
Article or where the employees are minor persons and they have no
representatives and the Courts fail to appoint the employee collective’s
representative organization as prescribed in clause 1 of this Article, the
Courts shall appoint organization representing collective labor to represent
such employees.
Article 89. Termination of the representation in civil
procedures
The
representatives at law, the proxy representatives in civil procedures shall
terminate their representation according to the provisions of the Civil Code.
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1. In
cases where the representation at law terminates while the represented persons
have come of age or had their civil act capacity restored such persons shall
participate in civil procedures themselves or authorize other persons to
participate in civil procedures according to procedures prescribed by this Code.
2. In
cases where the proxy representation terminates, the involved parties or their
heirs shall participate in civil procedures in person or authorize other
persons to participate in the procedures according to the procedures prescribed
by this Code.
Chapter VII
PROOFS AND EVIDENCES
Article 91. Obligations to prove
1. The
involved parties who petition the Courts to protect their legitimate rights and
interests must collect, introduce and supply the Courts with materials and
evidences to prove that such petitions are well-grounded and lawful, except for
the following cases:
a)
Litigators are customers who are not required to prove faults of organizations
and individuals trading goods and/or services Organizations and individuals
trading goods/services that are sued shall be obliged to prove that they have
no fault that leads to the damage as provided for in the Law on consumers’
right protection;
b)
Involved parties being employees in labor cases fail provide or supply the
Courts materials and evidences because such materials/evidences are being under
the management and retention of employers, thus the employers shall provide and
supply such materials and evidences to the Courts.
If an
involved party initiating a lawsuit over the unilateral termination of a labor
contract in case where the employer is not allowed to have the right to
unilaterally terminate the labor contract or where the employer fails to
enforce labor discipline on the employee as prescribed in legislation on labor,
the obligation to prove must be fulfilled by the employer;
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2. The
involved parties that protest against other persons' claims against them must
present in writing and must collect, introduce and supply the Courts with
materials and evidences to prove such protests.
3.
Agencies, organizations and individuals that initiate lawsuit to protect public
interests, the State’s interests, or petition Courts to protect others'
legitimate rights and interests must collect, provide and supply the Courts
with evidences to prove that their lawsuits or petitions are well-grounded and
lawful.
Social
organizations that protect interests of the consumers do not have the
obligation to prove the faults of organizations/individuals trading
goods/services according to the Law on protection of customer’s rights.
4. If the
involved parties that are obliged to introduce evidences to prove but fail to
introduce evidences or fail to introduce adequate evidences, the Courts shall
resolve the civil cases according to the collected evidences in the dossier
about the cases.
Article 92. Details and facts that are not required to be
proved
1. The
following details and facts are not required to be proved:
a) Details
and facts that are clear and come to everyone's knowledge and are accepted by
courts;
b)
Details and facts that have been identified in the Court judgments or decisions
which are legally effective or in decisions of competent State bodies which
have come into force;
c)
Details and facts that have been recorded in writing and have been notarized or
authenticated. If there is any suspicion of the objectiveness of such
details/facts or the objectiveness of the notarized/authenticated writing, the
Judge may request the involved parties or the notarizing/certifying agencies to
present the original copies.
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3. If an
involved party has a representative to participate in the procedures, that
representative's acknowledgement shall be regarded as the acknowledgement of
such involved party if it does not exceed the representative scope.
Article 93. Evidences
Evidences
in civil cases are factual things which are handed to Courts by involved
parties, agencies, organizations or individuals or gathered by Courts according
to the order and procedures prescribed by this Code and are used by Courts as
bases to determine objective details of the cases as well as to determine
whether the involved parties' claims or protests are well grounded and lawful
or not.
Article 94. Sources of evidence
Evidences
are gathered from the following sources:
1.
Readable, audible or visible materials, electronic data;
2.
Exhibits;
3.
Involved parties' testimonies;
4.
Witnesses' testimonies;
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6.
On-site appraisal minutes;
7.
Property evaluation and price appraisal results;
8.
Written records of legal facts or acts that are formulated by functional
persons;
9.
Notarized/authenticated documents;
10. Other
sources prescribed by law.
Article 95. Identifying evidences
1.
Contents-readable materials shall be regarded as evidences if they are
originals or copies lawfully notarized or authenticated or supplied and
certified by competent agencies or organizations.
2.
Audible, visible materials shall be regarded as evidences if they are presented
together with documents about the origins of such materials (applicable to
materials recorded by the presenting persons themselves) or the documents
certified by the one providing such materials for the presenting persons about
the origins of those materials or documents related to such audio and/or video
recording.
3.
Electronic data shall be presented in form of exchange of electronic data,
electronic invoices, electronic mails, telegram, telegraphy, facsimile and
other similar forms according to legislation on electronic transactions.
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5.
Involved parties' testimonies, witnesses' testimonies shall be regarded as
evidences if they are recorded in writing or in audio-tapes, audio-discs, or
video-tapes or discs or other audio or image recording devices as provided for
in Clause 2 of this Article, or are given orally in Court sessions.
6.
Expertising conclusions shall be regarded as evidences if the expertise is conducted
in accordance with the procedures prescribed by law.
7.
On-site appraisal minutes shall be regarded as evidences if the appraisal is
conducted in accordance with the procedures prescribed by law.
8.
Property evaluation results and price appraisal results shall be regarded as
evidences if the evaluation/appraisal is carried out in accordance with the
procedures prescribed by law.
9.
Written records of legal facts or acts that are formulated on site by
functional persons shall be regarded as evidences if the formulation of such
records is carried out according to the procedures prescribed by law.
10.
Notarized/authenticated documents shall be regarded as evidences if the
notarization/authentication is conducted according to the procedures prescribed
by law.
11. Other
sources prescribed by law shall be determined to be evidences according to
requirements and procedures prescribed by law.
Article 96. Hand-over of materials and evidences
1. During
the process of resolving civil cases by courts, the involved parties shall have
the rights and obligations to hand over materials and evidences to the courts.
If the handed materials/evidences are inadequate to form the base for
resolution of the matters/cases, the Judge shall request the involved parties
to supplement the materials/evidences. If the involved parties fail to hand
over the materials/evidences or do not hand over adequately the
materials/evidences requested by the Courts, the Courts shall resolve the civil
cases pursuant to the materials and evidences handed over by the involved
parties and those collected by the Courts according to regulations in Article
97 of this Code.
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3. The
materials/evidences submitted in ethnic minority languages or foreign languages
to Courts by the involved parties must be enclosed with their Vietnamese
translations that are lawfully notarized or authenticated.
4.
Deadline for handing over materials and evidences shall be defined by the
Judges in charge of the cases provided that such time does not exceed the
duration of preparation for adjudication according to first-instance procedures
and/or the duration of preparation for resolution of civil matters according to
regulations in this Code.
If the
Courts request the involve parties to hand over materials and evidences but the
involved parties fail to comply with due to good and sufficient reason and
supply the required materials and evidences when decisions to bring the cases
to trial according to first-instance procedures and the decisions to hold
meetings to resolve the civil matters have been issued, such involved parties
must prove the reasons for the lateness of supply of such materials/evidences.
Regarding materials and evidences which the Courts did not request the involved
parties to supplied or materials and evidences that the involved parties cannot
know about during the resolution of the cases according to first-instance
procedures, the involved parties may supply and present such
materials/evidences in first-instance trial sessions or the meetings for
resolving civil matters or later procedural stages of the resolution of such
civil cases.
5. When
materials and evidences hand over to the Courts, there must be their copies
sent to other involved parties or lawful representatives or other involved
parties; regarding materials and evidences specified in clause 2 Article 109 of
this Code or materials and evidences whose copies cannot be made, written notifications
must be sent to other involved parties or lawful representatives of other
involved parties.
Article 97. Verification and collection of evidences
1.
Agencies, organizations and individuals may collect materials and evidences
themselves by taking the following measures:
a)
Collecting readable, audible or visible materials, electronic data;
b)
Collecting exhibits;
c)
Defining witnesses and collecting confirmation of the witnesses;
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dd)
Requesting the People’s Committees of communes to authenticate the signatures
of the witnesses;
e)
Requesting the Courts to collect materials and evidences, in case the involved
parties cannot do it;
g)
Requesting the Courts to issue the decisions on request for expertise or
property evaluation;
h)
Requesting agencies, organizations and individuals to conduct other tasks as
prescribed by law.
2. In
cases prescribed by this Code, the Courts may take one or a number of the
following measures to collect materials and evidences:
a) Taking
testimonies of the involved parties, witnesses;
b)
Holding confrontations between involved parties and between involved parties
and witnesses;
c)
Requesting expertises;
d)
Conducting property evaluation;
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e)
Entrusting the collection and verification of documents and evidence;
g)
Requesting agencies, organizations and individuals to supply readable, audible
and visible materials or other exhibits related to the resolution of civil
cases;
h)
Verifying the presence or absence of the involved parties at the residence;
i) Other
measures according to regulations in this Code.
3. When
applying the measures specified in Points c, d, dd, e, and, Clause 2 of this
Article, the Judges must issue decisions clearly stating the reasons for the
application and the request of the courts.
4. In the
process of cassation trial, reopening trial, the Ombudspersons may take the
measures specified in points a, g and h clause 2 of this Article.
When the
ombudspersons take the measures specified in Points g Clause 2 of this Article,
the Courts must issue decisions clearly stating the reasons for the application
and the request of the courts.
5. Within
03 working days from the day on which the Courts collected the
materials/evidences, the Courts shall notify the involved parties of those
materials/evidences so that they can exercise their rights and obligations.
6. The
procuracy shall collect materials/evidences to ensure the exercise of appeal
jurisdiction according to the appellate, cassation trial or reopening trial
procedures.
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1. Judges
shall take the testimonies of involved parties only when the latter have not
yet made the written testimonies or the contents of their written testimonies
are insufficient and/or unclear. The involved parties must write the
testimonies themselves and sign their names thereon. Where the involved parties
cannot write the testimonies by themselves, the Judges shall take their
testimonies. The taking of involved parties' testimonies shall only focus on
details declared inadequately and/or unclearly by the involved parties. The
Judges themselves or the Court clerks shall record the involved parties'
testimonies in the minutes. Judges shall take testimonies of the involved
parties at the Court offices or outside the Court offices in case of necessity.
2. The
minutes recording involved parties' testimonies must be read or heard and
signed or fingerprinted by such involved parties. The involved parties may
petition amendments and/or supplements to be inscribed in the
testimony-recording minutes and sign or fingerprint for certification. The
minutes must be signed by the persons who take the testimonies, the minute
recorders and affixed with court's seals. If the minutes are made in loose pages,
each page must be signed and affixed with seal in both margins. In cases where
the minutes of taking the involved parties' testimonies are made outside the
Court offices, the testimony taking must be certified by witnesses or by the
People's Committees or police offices of communes, wards, townships or by
agencies or organizations where the minutes are made.
3. The
taking of involved parties' testimonies in one of the cases prescribed in
Clauses 4 and 5, Article 69 of this Code must be carried out in the presence of
the lawful representatives of such involved parties.
Article 99. Taking testimonies of witnesses
1. At the
request of the involved parties or when it is deemed necessary, Judges may take
testimonies of witnesses at Court offices or outside Court offices.
Before
taking testimonies of witnesses, the Judges must provide the witnesses with
information about rights and obligations of witnesses and request the witnesses
to undertake the truthfulness of their testimonies.
2. The
procedures for taking witnesses' testimonies shall be the same as those for
taking the involved parties' testimonies provided for in Clause 2, Article 98
of this Code.
3. The
taking of testimonies of witnesses aged not full 18 years, or of persons with
limited capacity of exercise or persons with limited cognition or behavior
control must be carried out in the presence of their representatives at law or
guardians.
Article 100. Confrontation
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2.
Confrontations must be recorded in minutes which must be signed by the
participants in such confrontations.
Article 101. On-site inspection/appraisal
1. At the
request of the involved parties or when it is deemed necessary, the Judges
shall carry out on-site inspections/appraisals in the presence of representatives
of People’s Committees of communes or Police offices of
communes/wards/townships or agencies/organizations where exits the objects
which need to be inspected/appraised; the on-site inspections/appraisals must
be notified in advance so that the involved parties know and witness such
inspections/appraisals.
2.
On-site inspections/appraisals must be recorded in minutes. The minutes must
clearly state the inspection/appraisal results, clearly describe the sites,
contain the signatures of the persons that conduct the inspections/appraisals
and the signatures or fingerprints of the involved parties if they are present,
of the representatives of the commune-level People's Committees or Police
offices of communes/wards/townships or agencies/organizations where exist the
to be-inspected/appraised objects and others that are invited to participate in
the inspections/appraisals. After completing the minutes, the persons that
conduct the inspections/appraisals must request the representatives of the
commune-level People's Committees or Police offices of communes/wards/townships
or agencies/organizations where exist the objects which need to be
inspected/appraised to sign and seal for certification.
3. Any
obstruction of the inspection/appraisal is forbidden.
4. If
there is any obstruction of the on-site inspection/appraisal, the Judge may
request the assistance of People’s Committees of communes or Police offices of
communes/wards/townships exist the objects subject to on-site
inspection/appraisal.
Article 102. Request for expertise
1.
Involved parties may petition Courts to request expertise or request expertise
themselves if the involved parties’ applications for referenda for expertise
have been rejected by the Courts. The right to apply for expertise shall be
exercised before the Courts issued decisions to bring the cases to trial
according to first-instance procedures or decisions to hold the meetings for
resolving civil matters.
2. At the
request of involved parties of when it is deemed necessary, Judges shall decide
to conduct referenda for expertise. In decisions to request an expertise, names
and addresses of expert-witnesses, objects of expertise, expertise matters and
requests that need conclusions of expert-witnesses must be specified.
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4. At the
request of involved parties or when it is deemed necessary, the Courts shall
make decisions to conduct referenda for additional expertises if the expertising
conclusions are not satisfactory or when new issues relating to details of the
cases that have been given expertising conclusions formerly.
5. The
re-expertise shall be conducted if there are grounds for presuming that the
initial expertise conclusions are inexact and contrary to law or of special
cases according to decisions of Chairpersons of the Supreme People’s Procuracy
and/or Chief Justices of the Supreme People’s Court according to provisions of
the Law on judicial expertise.
Article 103. Requesting expertise of evidences denounced to
be forgery
1. Where
evidences are denounced to be forgery, the suppliers of such evidences may
withdraw them. If not, the denouncers may request the courts, or the Courts
decide themselves, to solicit expertises as provided for in Article 102 of this
Code.
2. Where
the evidence forgery shows criminal signs, the Courts shall transfer the
relevant materials and evidences to the competent criminal investigation bodies
for consideration according to regulations in laws on criminal procedures.
3. The
suppliers of evidences that are concluded to be forged evidences must
compensate for damage if the forgery of such evidences causes damage to others
and must pay the cost of expertise if the Court decides to request expertise.
Article 104. Property evaluation and price appraisal
1.
Involved parties may provide the price of the properties that are being in
dispute or reach agreement about the price of the properties that are being in
dispute.
2. The
parties may reach agreement on the selection of property appraisal
organizations to conduct the evaluation of properties and provide the price
evaluation results for the Courts.
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3. Courts
shall make decisions on property price assessment and set up Price Assessment
Councils in the following cases:
a) At the
request of involved parties;
b)
Involved parties failed to reach agreement about selection of price assessment
organizations or offered prices were different or agreement about prices has
not been reached;
c)
Parties reach agreements with each other or with price assessment councils the
prices which are lower than the market prices of the area where the properties
are located at the time of price assessment to evade fulfilling obligations to
the State or the third parties or there are grounds proving that the price
assessment organizations commit violations against law provisions when conducting
price assessment.
4.
Procedures for establishment of Price Assessment Council and procedures for
price assessment:
a) Price
Assessment Councils shall be established by Courts and shall consist of the
representatives of financial agencies as the Chairpersons and representatives
of relevant specialized agencies as members. Persons who have conducted
procedures in such cases and persons specified in Article 52 of this Code must
not be members of Price Assessment Councils.
Price
Assessment Councils shall conduct assessment only when no members of the
Councils are absent. When it is necessary, representatives of People’s
Committees of communes where the to be-assessed properties are located shall be
invited to witness the assessment. Involved parties shall be priorly notified
of time and place of price assessment, shall be entitled to attend and express
opinions about the price assessment. Price Assessment Councils shall be
entitled to make decisions on prices of the properties which are assessed;
b) Financial
agencies and specialized agencies which are relevant shall be responsible for
assigning persons to be members of Price Assessment Councils and enable them to
fulfill tasks. Persons assigned to be members of Price Assessment Councils
shall participate fully the assessment. If financial agencies and/or
specialized agencies fail to assign persons to be members of Price Assessment
Councils, Courts shall request competent immediate management agencies to
direct financial agencies and specialized agencies to fulfill their requests.
If persons who are assigned to be members of Prices Assessment Councils are
absent without plausible reasons, Courts shall request heads of agencies having
assigned such persons shall consider responsibility and appoint replacements
and notify the Courts so that the price assessment could be conducted;
c) Price
assessment must be recorded into minutes where opinions of each present members
and involved parties shall be specified. Decisions of Price Assessment Councils
must be approved by more than half of their members. Members of Price
Assessment Councils, involved parties and witnesses shall append signatures or
fingerprints to the minutes.
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Article 105. Entrusting the collection of evidences
1. In the
course of resolving civil cases, a Court may issue a decision to entrust
another Court or a competent agency defined in Clause 4 of this Article to take
the testimonies of involved parties, and/or witnesses, to conduct on-site
appraisals or property evaluations or other measures to gather evidences and to
verify details of the civil cases.
2. The
entrustment decisions must clearly state the names and addresses of the
plaintiffs and the defendants, the disputed relationship and specific entrusted
jobs to collect of evidences.
3. The
Court that receives the entrustment decision shall have the responsibility to
perform the specific assignments within 1 month from the day on which the
entrustment decision is received and shall notify in writing the results to the
Court that has issued the entrustment decision. In cases where it cannot
realize the specific assignments, it must send a written notification of such
failure stating clearly the reasons therefor to the Court that has issued the
entrustment decision.
4. If the
collection of evidences must be carried out overseas, the Courts shall conduct
the entrustment procedures through Vietnamese competent agencies or competent
agencies of foreign countries that sign International treaty with the Socialist
Republic of Vietnam.
5. If the
Courts fail to conduct the entrustment as prescribed in clauses 3 and 4 of this
Article or the Courts have conducted the entrustment but the results are not
sent, the Courts shall lawsuit settlement pursuant to the evidences that have
filed in the civil lawsuit dossier.
Article 106. Requesting agencies, organizations and
individuals to supply materials and evidences
1.
Involved parties may request agencies, organizations and individuals to supply
materials and evidences. Any involved parties requesting agencies,
organizations and individuals to supply materials and/or evidences shall make a
written application clearly stating the to be-supplied materials/evidences;
reasons for supply; full names and addresses of individuals, names and
addresses of agencies/organizations that are managing or keeping the to
be-supplied materials/evidences.
Agencies,
organizations or individuals shall supply materials and evidences to involved
parties within 15 days from the day on which the requests are received;
otherwise, written responses containing explanation shall be made and sent to
the requesters.
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The
involved parties that request the Courts to gather materials/evidences shall
make written applications clearly stating the point(s) to be proved, the
evidence to be gathered, the reasons why they cannot gather the evidences by
themselves; full names and addresses of the individuals, agencies or
organizations that are managing or keeping the evidences which need to be
collected.
3. When
there are requests of involved parties or when it is deemed necessary, the
Courts shall issue decisions requesting agencies, organizations and individuals
that are managing or keeping the materials/evidences to supply those
materials/evidences to the Courts.
Agencies,
organizations and individuals managing or keeping the materials/evidences have
the responsibility to supply adequately materials and evidences at the request
of the Courts within 15 days from the day on which the requests are received;
after such time limit, if such agencies, organizations or individuals fail to
supply adequately materials and evidences at the request of the Courts, they
shall make written responses containing explanation. Any agencies,
organizations or individuals failing to comply with the requests of the Courts
without good and sufficient reasons shall be administratively sanctioned or
shall face criminal prosecution as prescribed by law, depending on nature and
severity of the violations. The administrative penalties or criminal
prosecution as prescribed by law imposed on the agencies, organizations or
individuals shall not mean the exemption from supply of materials/evidences to
the Courts.
4. If the
procuracies request the materials/evidences, the agencies, organizations and
individuals shall comply with regulations in clause 3 of this Article.
Article 107. Preserving materials and evidences
1. If
materials/evidences have been handed over at courts, the preservation of such
materials/evidences shall rest with the courts.
2. If
materials/evidences cannot be handed over at courts, the preservation of such
materials/evidences shall rest with the materials/evidence keepers.
3. Where
it is necessary to hand over materials/evidences to the third persons for
preservation, Judges shall issue decisions and make minutes of the hand-over to
those persons for preservation. The persons undertaking the preservation must
sign the minutes, be entitled to remuneration and bear the responsibility for
preserving such materials/evidences as prescribed by law.
4. Any
destruction of materials/evidences shall be strictly forbidden.
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1. The
assessment of evidences must be objective, comprehensive, adequate and
accurate.
2. Courts
must assess evidences one by one, the link between evidences and determine the
lawfulness, the relevance and the proving capacity of every evidence.
Article 109. Disclosing and using materials and evidences
1. Any evidence shall
be publicly and equally disclosed and used, except for cases specified in
Clause 2 of this Article.
2. Courts
shall not disclose material/evidence contents related to State secrets, fine
customs and practices of the nation, professional secrets, business secrets,
family secrets or secrets of individuals' private lives at the legitimate
requests of the involved parties; however, Courts shall notify the involved
parties of the materials/evidences that must not be disclosed.
3.
Proceeding officers and procedure participants must keep secret, as provided
for by law, materials and evidences specified in Clause 2 of this Article.
Article 110. Protecting evidences
1. Where
evidences are being destroyed or are in danger of being destroyed or are hard
to be gathered in the future, the involved parties may request the Courts to
decide to apply necessary measures to preserve the evidences. The requests of
the involved parties must be made in writing. The Courts may decide to apply
one or several of the measures including sealing, keeping, photographing,
audio-recording, video-recording, restoration, examination, minutes making and
other measures.
2. Where
witnesses are cheated, threatened, compelled or bought off for the purpose of
not supplying evidences or supplying untruthful evidences, the Courts shall
have the right to issue decisions to force the persons who have committed acts
of cheating, threatening, compelling or buying off the witnesses to terminate
their acts. Where the acts show criminal signs, the Courts shall request
procuracies to examine the penal liability.
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PROVISIONAL EMERGENCY MEASURES
Article 111. Right to petition the application of provisional
emergency measures
1. During
the resolution of civil lawsuits, the involved parties or their lawful
representatives or agencies, organizations or individuals instituting the cases
defined in Article 187 of this Code may petition the Courts handling such cases
to apply one or more provisional emergency measures provided for in Article 114
of this Code to provisionally deal with the urgent petitions of the involved
parties, to protect lives, health, properties, gather and protect evidences,
preserving their current conditions in order to avoid irrecoverable damage and
to ensure the lawsuit settlement or judgment execution.
2. In
urgent cases where it is necessary to immediately protect evidences or to
prevent possible serious consequences, relevant agencies, organizations and
individuals may petition the competent Courts to issue decisions to apply
provisional emergency measures prescribed in Article 114 of this Code,
simultaneously with the submission of applications to initiate the lawsuits to
such courts.
3. The
Courts shall issue decisions on their own to apply the provisional emergency
measures only in the cases provided for in Article 135 of this Code.
Article 112. Competence to decide on the application,
change or cancellation of provisional emergency measures
1. Before
the opening of a Court session, the application, change or cancellation of
provisional emergency measures shall be considered and decided by a Judge.
2. In the
Court sessions, the application, change, cancellation of provisional emergency
measures shall be considered and decided by the trial panels.
Article 113. Responsibilities for improper application of
provisional emergency measures
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2. If the
Courts apply the provisional emergency measures improperly, thus causing damage
to those subject to such measures or to the third persons, the Courts shall
have to pay compensation therefor in the following cases:
a) The
Courts have applied the provisional emergency measures on their own;
b) The
Courts have applied other provisional emergency measures than those petitioned
by agencies/organizations/individuals;
c) The
Courts have applied the provisional emergency measures beyond the petitions of
agencies, organizations and individuals;
d) The
Courts have applied the provisional emergency measures unconformably with the
time limit prescribed by law or the Courts fail to apply the provisional
emergency measures without good and sufficient reasons.
3. The
compensation specified in clause 2 of this Article shall comply with
regulations in the Law on State compensation liability.
Article 114. Provisional emergency measures
1.
Sending minor persons, legally incapacitated persons, person with limited
cognition or behavior control to individuals or organizations for looking
after, nurturing, taking care of and educating.
2.
Forcing the prior performance of part of the alimony obligation.
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4.
Forcing the employers to provide the employees with advance wages, health
insurance, social insurance, treatment cost for occupational accidents or occupational
diseases or compensations, allowances for occupational accidents or
occupational diseases.
5.
Suspending the execution of decisions on unilateral termination of labor
contract or decisions on dismissal of employees.
6.
Distraining the disputed properties.
7.
Prohibiting the transfer of property right over the disputed properties.
8.
Prohibiting the change of the current conditions of disputed properties.
9.
Permitting the harvesting, sale of subsidiary food crops or other products,
commodities.
10.
Freezing accounts at banks or other credit institutions, State treasury;
freezing properties at places of their deposit.
11.
Freezing properties of the obligor.
12.
Prohibiting involved parties from performing, or forcing them to perform
certain acts.
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14.
Prohibiting the contact with victims of family violence.
15.
Suspending the bid closing and activities related to bidding.
16.
Arresting aircrafts or ships to ensure the lawsuit settlement.
17. Other
provisional emergency measures provided for by law.
Article 115. Sending minor persons, legally incapacitated
persons, person with limited cognition or behavior control to individuals or
organizations for looking after, nurturing, taking care of and educating.
The
sending of minor persons, legally incapacitated persons, person with limited
cognition or behavior control to individuals or organizations for looking
after, nurturing, taking care of and educating shall be applied if the
resolution of cases involves such persons who have no guardians.
The
sending of minors who are from full 7 years old or elder shall be carried out
after considering their expectation.
Article 116. Forced prior-performance of part of the
alimony obligation
The
forced prior-performance of part of the alimony obligation shall be applied if
the resolution of cases is related to alimony petitions which are deemed
well-grounded and the failure to immediately perform in advance part of the
alimony obligation shall affect the health and/or life of the persons entitled
to the alimony.
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Forced
prior-performance of part of the obligation to pay compensation for damage to
health or life shall be applied if the case resolution is related to petitions
for compensation for damage to health or life.
Article 118. Forcing of the employers to provide the
employees with advance wages, health insurance, social insurance, treatment
cost for occupational accidents or occupational diseases or compensations,
allowances for occupational accidents or occupational diseases
Forcing
the employers to provide the employees with advance wages, health insurance,
social insurance, treatment cost for occupational accidents or occupational
diseases or compensations, allowances for occupational accidents or
occupational diseases shall be applied to protect the lawful rights and
obligations of employees pertaining to wages, insurance, compensation,
allowances, healthcare services as prescribed by law.
Article 119. Suspending the execution of decisions on
unilateral termination of labor contract or decisions on dismissal of employees
The
suspension of the execution of decisions on unilateral termination of labor
contract or decisions on dismissal of employees shall be applied if the lawsuit
settlement related to the unilateral termination of labor contract, dismissal
of employees is of cases the employers are not allowed to execute the right to
unilaterally terminate the labor contract or dismiss the employees as
prescribed by the legislation on labor.
Article 120. Distraining disputed properties
1. The
distraint of disputed properties shall be applied if in the course of settling
cases there are grounds showing that the keepers of the disputed properties are
committing acts of dispersing or destroying the properties.
2. The
distrained properties may be kept and preserved at the offices of the
judgment-executing bodies or assigned in minutes to one involved party or the
third person for management until a decision of the Court is issued.
Article 121. Prohibiting the transfer of property right
over disputed properties.
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Article 122. Prohibiting the change of existing conditions
of disputed properties
The
prohibition to change the existing conditions of disputed properties shall
apply if in the process of settling cases there are grounds showing that the
persons possessing or keeping the disputed properties are committing acts of
disassembly, assembly, expansion or other acts, thus changing the existing
conditions of such properties.
Article 123. Permitting to harvest and sell subsidiary food
crops or other products or commodities
The
permission to harvest and sell subsidiary food crops or other products and
commodities shall be applied if in the course of settling cases, disputed
properties are related to subsidiary food crops or other products, commodities,
which are in the period of harvesting or cannot be preserved for a long time.
Article 124. Freezing accounts at banks, other credit
institutions, State Treasury
Freezing
accounts at banks, other credit institutions, State Treasury shall be applied
if in the course of settling cases there are grounds showing that the obligors
have accounts at banks, other credit institutions or State Treasury and the
application of this measure is necessary to ensure the settlement of the cases
or to ensure the judgment enforcement.
Article 125. Freezing properties at depositories
Freezing
properties at depositories shall be applied if in the course of settling cases
there are grounds showing that the obligors have their properties deposited and
the application of this measure is necessary to ensure the settlement of the
cases or to ensure the judgment enforcement.
Article 126. Freezing the obligors' properties
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Article 127. Prohibiting or forcing the performance of
certain acts
Prohibiting
or forcing the performance of certain acts shall be applied if in the course of
settling cases there are grounds showing that the non-performance or
performance of certain acts by involved parties or agencies, organizations
and/or individuals affects the case resolution or the legitimate rights and
interests of others that are involved in the cases being resolved by courts.
Article 128. Prohibiting the obligors from leaving Vietnam
Prohibiting
the obligors from leaving Vietnam shall be applied if there are grounds showing
that the lawsuit settlement is related to their obligations towards the State
or other agencies, organizations and/or individuals and their leaving from
Vietnam affects the case resolution, the interests of the State, legitimate
rights and interests of other agencies, organizations and individuals or to
ensure the judgment enforcement.
Article 129. Prohibiting the contact with victims of family
violence
Prohibiting
the contact with victims of family violence shall be applied if it is necessary
for protecting lives, health and honor of the victims of family violence as
prescribed in the Law on family violence prevention and control.
Article 130. Suspending the bid closing and activities
related to bidding
The
suspension of bid closing, approval for shortlists and/or results of selection
of contractors and investors, contract conclusion or contract execution shall
be applied if the course of case resolution shows that the application of such
measures is necessary for ensuring the case resolution conformable to the law
provisions.
Article 131.
Arresting aircrafts or seagoing ships to ensure the case resolution
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2. Courts
shall make decisions on the application of provisional emergency measures to
arrest ships in the following cases:
a)
Persons who initiate lawsuits against civil lawsuits apply for arrest of
seagoing ships to ensure the settlement of their marine complaints;
b) Owners
of ships are persons who have obligation about properties in the cases being in
settle and are still ships’ owners at the time of application of provisional
emergency measures to arrest ships;
c) Demise
charterers, time charterers, voyage charterers or ship operators are person
having obligations about properties in civil lawsuits arising from marine
complaints prescribed in Vietnam Marine Code and are still demise charterers,
time charterers, voyage charterers or ship operators or ship owners at the time
of application of provisional emergency measures to arrest seagoing ships;
d)
Disputes are being settled in the cases arising on the basis of the mortage of
such seagoing ships;
dd)
Disputes are being settled in cases related to the ownership or the right of
possession of such seagoing ships.
3.
Procedures for arresting aircrafts or seagoing ships shall comply with law
regulations on arrest of aircrafts/seagoing ships.
Article 132. Other provisional emergency measures
Apart
from provisional emergency measures specified in clause 1 to clause 16 Article
114 of this Code, the Courts shall resolve the petitions for application of
other provisional emergency measures prescribed in other laws.
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1. Any
person who petitions the Court to apply a provisional emergency measure must
make an application and send it to a competent court. Such application must
contain the following principal details:
a) Date
of the application;
b) Name,
address; phone number, fax, e-mail address (if any) of the petitioner for the
application of provisional emergency measures;
c) Name,
address; phone number, fax, e-mail address (if any) of the persons subject to
the application of provisional emergency measures;
d)
Summarized contents of the dispute or act of infringing upon the legitimate
rights and interests of his/her own;
dd)
Reasons for the application of the provisional emergency measures;
e)
Provisional emergency measures to be applied and specific requirements.
Depending
on the requests for application of provisional emergency measures, the
petitioners must provide the Courts with evidences to prove the necessity to
apply such provisional emergency measures.
2. The
petition for application of provisional emergency measures in cases specified
in clause 1 Article 11 of this Code shall be resolved as follows:
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b) If the
trial panels receive the applications at the Court sessions, the trial panels
shall consider, discuss and resolve the petitions at the courtrooms. If the
application is accepted, the trial panels shall issue the decisions to apply
the provisional emergency measures immediately or when the petitioners have
applied the security measures prescribed in Article 136 of this Code. The
security measures shall be applied since the trial panel has issued the
decisions to force the application of security measures but the petitioner must
present evidences about the completion of application of security measures
before the trial panel members get in the deliberation room; if the petition
for application of provisional emergency measures is rejected, the trial panel
shall immediately announce the refusal and recorded it to the Court minute.
3.
Regarding petitions for application of provisional emergency measures specified
in clause 2 Article 111 of this Code, when the written petitions enclosed with
petitions and evidences have been received, Chief Justices of the Courts shall
immediately assign Judges to solve the petitions. Within 48 hours since a
petition is received, the Judge shall consider and make decision to apply
provisional emergency measures; if the petition is rejected, the Judge shall
issue a written notification containing explanation for the petitioner.
4. For
cases where provisional emergency measures specified in clauses 10 and 11
Article 144 of this Code are applied, only accounts, properties valuing
equivalent to financial obligations that the persons liable to provisional
emergency measures are obliged to fulfill shall be blockaded.
Article 134. Recommendation for application of provisional
emergency measures of agencies, organizations and individuals initiating
lawsuits to protect public interests, State interests and lawful rights and
interests of other people
Agencies,
organizations and individuals initiating lawsuits specified in Article 187 of
this Code shall recommend the Courts to apply provisional emergency measures;
such recommendation shall contain the reasons; provisional emergency measures
which should be applied; names and addresses of persons lawful rights and
interests which need to be protected; names and addresses of persons on whom
provisional emergency measures should be applied; summaries of disputes,
infringement upon lawful rights and interests of involved parties and evidences
proving that their recommendations are grounded and lawful.
Article 135. Courts make decisions on application of
provisional emergency measures by themselves
Courts
shall make decisions on application of provisional emergency measures specified
in clauses 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 Article 114 of this Code by themselves in cases
where the involved parties do not petition the application of provisional
emergency measures.
Article 136. Forcible application of security measures
1. The
persons who petition the Courts to apply one of the provisional emergency
measures prescribed in Clauses 6, 7, 8, 10, 11, 15 and 16 Article 114 of this
Code must submit to the Courts guarantee invoices deposit a money sum, precious
metals, precious stones or valuable papers as determined by the courts, which
must be equivalent to the property obligation to be performed by the obligor in
order to protect the interests of the persons against whom the provisional
emergency measures are applied and to prevent the abuse of right to petition
the application of the provisional emergency measures by petitioners.
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2. Sums
of money, precious metals, gemstones or valuable papers must be put into escrow
account at banks of where the offices of the Courts making decisions to apply
provisional emergency measures are located within the time defined by the
Courts.
If the
security measures are conducted on holidays or on days-off, the sums of money
subject to security measures shall be retained at the Courts. The Courts shall
conduct submitting and receiving procedures and shall immediately send such
amount to the banks on the next working days.
Article 137. Changing, additionally applying provisional
emergency measures
When the
provisional emergency measures being applied are deemed no longer suitable and
need to be changed or other provisional emergency measures should be
additionally applied, the procedures for changing the provisional emergency
measures or additionally applying other provisional emergency measures shall
comply with the provision in Article 133 in this Code.
Article 138. Cancellation of the application of provisional
emergency measures
1. The
Courts shall immediately issue decisions to cancel the applied provisional
emergency measures in one of the following cases:
a) It is
so petitioned by the persons who have petitioned the application of provisional
emergency measures;
b) The
persons who are obliged to execute the decisions on application of provisional
emergency measures shall deposit property as security or other persons apply
measures to secure the performance of the obligations toward the petitioners;
c) Civil
obligations of the obligor terminate as provided for in the Civil Code;
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dd) The
decisions on application of provisional emergency measures are unconformable to
the provisions of this Code;
e) The
grounds for application of the provisional emergency measures are no longer
existed;
g) The
cases have been resolved with judgments/decisions of the Courts that have been
effective;
h) The
Courts have returned the lawsuit petitions as prescribed in this Code.
2. In
case of canceling the application of provisional emergency measures, the Courts
must consider and permit the persons who have petitioned the application of
provisional emergency measures to receive back the security invoices which are
secured with assets of banks or other credit organizations security money sums,
precious metals, precious stones or valuable papers prescribed in Article 136
of this Code, except for the cases specified in Clause 1, Article 113 of this
Code.
3.
Procedures for issuance of decisions on cancelation of application of
provisional emergency measures shall comply with regulations in Article 133 of
this Code. If there are effective judgments/decisions of the Courts, the
resolution of petitions for cancelation of decisions on application of
provisional emergency measures shall be resolved by a Judge assigned by the
Chief Justice of the Courts having issued the decisions on application of
provisional emergency measures.
Article 139. Effect of decisions on application, change or
cancellation of provisional emergency measures
1.
Decisions on application, change, or cancellation of provisional emergency
measures shall take immediate implementation effect.
2. The
Courts must issue or send decisions on application, change or cancellation of
provisional emergency measures to the petitioners, the persons subject to the
application thereof, and relevant agencies, organizations and individuals and
competent civil judgment-executing bodies and procuracies of the same level
immediately after the issuance of such decisions.
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The
involved parties shall have the right to complain, and the procuracies shall
have the right to submit recommendations to the Chief Justices of Courts which
are settling cases about decisions on application, change or cancellation of
provisional emergency measures, or about the non-issuance of such decisions by
Judges. The time limit for lodging a complaint or recommendation is 03 working
days from the day on which the decisions on application, change or cancellation
of provisional emergency measures or the replies of Judges about the
non-issuance of decisions on application, change or cancellation of provisional
emergency measures are received.
Article 141. Complaint, recommendations about decisions on
application, change or cancellation or non-application, non-change,
non-cancellation of provisional emergency measures
1. The
Chief Justices of Courts must consider and settle complaints and recommendations
prescribed in Article 140 of this Code within 03 working days from the day on
which the complaints or recommendations are received.
2. The
Chief Justices' decisions on settlement of complaints, recommendations shall be
the final ones and must be issued or sent immediately according to the
provisions of Clause 2, Article 139 of this Code.
3. In
Court sessions, the settlement of complaints or recommendations falls within
the jurisdiction of the trial panels. The trial panels' decisions on settlement
of complaints or recommendations shall be the final ones.
Article 142. Execution of decisions on application, change
or cancellation of provisional emergency measures
1. The
decisions on application, change or cancellation of provisional emergency
measures shall be executed in accordance with law regulations on civil judgment
execution.
2. If the
decisions on application of provisional emergency measures involve properties
with registration of right to ownership and/or right to enjoyment, the involved
parties are obliged to submit copies of the decisions to the agencies managing
the registration of right to ownership and/or right to enjoyment.
Chapter IX
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Section 1. Court FEES AND CHARGES
Article 143. Court fee advance, charge advance; Court fees
and charges
1. Court
fee advances shall include first-instance Court fee advances and appellate
Court fee advances.
2. Court
fees shall include first-instance Court fees and appellate Court fees.
3. Charge
advances for civil matter resolution shall include first-instance charge
advances and appellate charge advances.
4.
Charges shall include charges for providing copies of judgments, decisions or
other documents of courts, charges for submitting applications requesting
Courts to settle civil matters, charges for settlement of civil matters and
other charges stipulated by law.
Article 144. Handling of collected Court fee advance,
charge advance, Court fees and charges
1. All
collected Court fees and charges must be fully and timely remitted into the
State budget at the State Treasury.
2. Court
fee advance and charge advance shall be submitted to the competent
judgment-executing agencies for deposit in custody accounts opened at the State
Treasury, and shall be withdrawn for judgment execution under Court decisions.
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In cases
where the persons who have advanced Court fees and/or charges are entitled to
partial or full reimbursement of the amounts they have paid under Court
judgments or decisions, the judgment-executing agencies which have collected
the Court fee advances or charge advances must carry out procedures to return
the money to them.
4. In
cases where the resolution of the civil cases is suspended, the already
advanced Court fees and/or advanced charges shall be disposed when the
resolution of the civil cases resumes.
Article 145. Regime of collection and expenditure of Court
fee advances, charge advances, Court fees and charges
The
collection of Court fee advances and Court fees, charge advances and Court
charges; and the payment of Court fee advances, charge advances must comply
with law provisions.
Article 146. Obligation to advance Court fees and advance
charges
1. The
plaintiffs, the defendants who have made counter-claims against the plaintiffs
and the persons with related rights and interests who have made independent
claims in civil lawsuits must advance first-instance Court fees; the persons
who have made appeals must advance appellate Court fees, except for cases where
they are exempted from, or do not have to pay Court fee advances.
2.
Persons who have submitted applications petitioning Courts to settle civil
matters must advance charges for the resolution of such civil matters, except
for cases where they are exempt from, or do not have to pay the charge advances.
Regarding
persons applying for recognition of voluntary divorces and agreements on child
custody and property division upon divorce, husbands and wives may agree about
the payment of charge advances, except for cases where they are exempt from, or
do not have to pay the charge advances according to law provisions. If spouses fail to
agree the payment of charge advance, each of them shall pay a half of the
charge advance.
Article 147. Obligation to bear first-instance Court fees
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2. In
cases where the involved parties cannot themselves determine their portions in
the common properties and petition the Courts to settle the division of the
common properties, each party must bear the first-instance Court fee
corresponding to the value of the property portion she/he enjoys.
3. Prior
to the opening of Court sessions, the Courts shall conduct mediations; if the
involved parties have reached mutual agreement on the resolution of cases, they
must bear 50% of the first-instance Court fee level prescribed in Clauses 1 and
2 of this Article.
4. The
plaintiffs in divorce cases must pay first-instance Court fees, without
depending on whether the Courts accept their petitions or not. In cases where
both parties voluntarily agree on their divorce, each involved party must bear
half of the first-instance Court fees.
5. If an
involved party to a case is exempted from the first-instance Court fee, then
the other involved party shall still have to pay the first-instance Court fee
payable under Clauses 1, 2, 3 and 4 of this Article.
6. Where
the case is suspended, the obligation to pay first-instance Court fee shall be
decided when the resolution of the case resumes in accordance with the
provisions in this Article.
Article 148. Obligation to bear first-instance Court fees
1. The
appellant must pay the appellate Court fees, if the appealed first-instance
judgments or decision are upheld by the Courts of appeal, except for cases
where the appellants are exempted from, or do not have to pay such fees.
2. The
appellants shall not pay the appellate Court fees, if the appealed first-instance
judgments or decisions are amended by the Courts of appeal. The Courts of
appeal must re-determine the obligation to bear first-instance Court fees as
provided for in Article 147 of this Code.
3. Where
the Courts of appeal abrogate the appealed first-instance judgments/decisions
for re-trial under first-instance procedure, the appellants shall not be
obliged to bear the appellate Court fees. The obligation to bear Court fees
shall be re-determined when the cases are retried under first-instance procedure.
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1. The
obligation to bear charges shall be determined depending on specific types of
civil matters and shall be specified in law.
2.
Regarding persons applying for recognition of voluntary divorces and agreements
on child custody and property division upon divorces, husbands and wives may
agree about the payment of charges, except for cases where they are exempt
from, or do not have to pay the charges according to law provisions.
If spouses fail to
agree the payment of charge, each of them shall pay a half of the charge.
Article 150. Specific regulations on Court fees and charges
Pursuant
to the provisions of the Law on fees and charges and provisions of this Code,
the Standing committee of the National Assembly of the Socialist Republic of
Vietnam shall issue specific regulations on Court fees and charges; rates of
Court fees and charges for specific matters/cases; cases eligible for exemption
or reduction from Court fees and charges, cases not subject to paying Court
fees and charges; regulations on collection, payment, management and use of
Court fees and charges.
Section 2. OTHER PROCEDURAL EXPENSES
Article 151. Overseas request for judicial assistance
expense advance, overseas request for judicial assistance expense
1.
Overseas request for judicial assistance means a sum of money temporarily calculated by
the Court to be pay for request for judicial assistance upon the collection and
supply of evidences or delivery of papers, documents and materials and the summoning
of witnesses or expert witnesses and requests for judicial assistance related
to the settlement of a civil case.
2.
Overseas request for judicial assistance expense means the necessary and
reasonable sum of money to be paid for the performance of request for judicial
assistance according to law provisions of Vietnam and the country requested for
request for judicial assistance.
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1.
Plaintiffs or appellants according to appellate procedures or other involved
parties in civil lawsuits must pay the overseas request for judicial assistance
expense advance if their requests results in the overseas request for judicial
assistance.
2.
Petitioners for settlement of civil matters or appellants according to
appellate procedures or other involved parties in civil matters must pay the
overseas request for judicial assistance expense advance if their requests
results in the overseas request for judicial assistance.
Article 153. Obligation to bear overseas request for
judicial assistance expense
Unless
otherwise agreed by involved parties or provided for by laws, the obligation to
bear the overseas request for judicial assistance expense shall be determined
as follows:
1.
Involved parties must bear the overseas request for judicial assistance expense if their
requests for settlement of cases are rejected by the Courts;
2. In
case where the Court is requested to divide a common property, each person who
has received a share from such property must bear the overseas request for
judicial assistance expense amount proportionate to the value of the property
share he/she has received;
3. In
divorce cases, plaintiffs must pay the overseas request for judicial assistance
expense, regardless of whether the Courts accept their requests or not. In
cases where both parties voluntarily agree on their divorce, each involved
party must bear half of the overseas request for judicial assistance expense;
4. If the
settlement of the cases is suspended as prescribed in point c clause 1 Article
217, point b clause 1 Article 299 of this Code, the plaintiffs must bear the
overseas request for judicial assistance expense.
If the
settlement of the cases is suspended as prescribed in point b clause 1 Article
289, clause 3 Article 296 of this Code, the appellants according to appellate
procedures must bear the overseas request for judicial assistance expense;
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Article 154. Handling of overseas request for judicial
assistance expense advance
1. If the
person who has paid the request for judicial assistance advance is not liable
for the request for judicial assistance expense, the person who has to bear
such expense under the decision of the Court shall refund such advance to the
former.
2. In
cases where the person who has paid the request for judicial assistance expense advance
is liable for the request for judicial assistance expense and the advance that
has been paid is smaller than the actual request for judicial assistance
expense, such person must pay the deficit; if the paid advance is bigger than the
actual request for judicial assistance expense, such person shall receive the
surplus according to the court's decision.
Article 155.
On-site inspection/appraisal expense advance, on-site inspection/appraisal
expense
1.
On-site inspection/appraisal expense advance means a sum of money that is
estimated by the Court to be paid for the on-site inspection/appraisal.
2.
On-site inspection/appraisal expense means a necessary and reasonable sum of
money to be paid for the on-site inspection/appraisal pursuant to law
provisions.
Article 156.
Obligation to pay on-site inspection/appraisal expense advance
1. Persons who request the Courts to conduct on-site
inspection/appraisal must pay the on-site inspection/appraisal expense advance
at the request of the Court.
2. In cases where the Courts deem it is necessary and
decide to conduct on-site inspection/appraisal, the plaintiffs, the
persons requesting for settlement of civil matters and the appellants according
to appeallate procedures must pay the on-site inspection/appraisal advance.
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Unless
otherwise agreed by involved parties or provided for by laws, the obligation to
bear the on-site inspection/appraisal expense shall be determined as follows:
1.
Involved parties must bear the on-site
inspection/appraisal expense if their requests
are rejected by the Courts;
2. In
cases
where the Court is requested to divide a common property, each person who has
received a share from such property must bear the on-site inspection/appraisal
expense amount proportionate to the value of the property share he/she has
received;
3. In
divorce cases, plaintiffs must pay the on-site
inspection/appraisal expense, regardless of
whether the Courts accept their requests or not. In cases where both parties
voluntarily agree on their divorce, each involved party must bear half of the on-site inspection/appraisal expense;
4. If the
settlement of the cases is suspended
as prescribed in point c clause 1 Article 217,
point b clause 1 Article 299 of this Code, the plaintiffs must bear the on-site inspection/appraisal expense.
If the
settlement of the cases is suspended as prescribed in point b clause 1 Article
289, clause 3 Article 296 of this Code, the appellants according to appellate
procedures must bear the on-site
inspection/appraisal expense;
5. For
other cases where the settlement is suspended according to regulations of this
Code, persons who request for the
inspection/appraisal must bear the on-site inspection/appraisal expense.
Article 158.
Handling of on-site inspection/appraisal expense advances
1. If the
person who has paid the on-site
inspection/appraisal advance is not liable for
the on-site inspection/appraisal expense, the person who has to bear such expense under the
decision of the Court shall refund such advance to the former.
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Article 159. Expertise expense advance, expertise
expense
1. Expertise expense advance means a sum of money
estimated by the expert-witness to be paid for the expertise under the Court's
decision or at the request of the involved parties.
2. Expertise expense
means a necessary and reasonable sum of money to be paid for the expertise that is calculated by the expert-witness pursuant to law provisions.
Article 160. Obligation to pay expertising expense advances
In cases
where the parties do not otherwise agree or the law does not otherwise
prescribe, the obligation to pay expertising expense advances shall be
determined as follows:
1.
Persons requesting the Courts to request expertise must pay the expertising
expense advances.
If the
involved parties requesting the Courts to request expertise on the same
objects, each involved party must pay a half of the expertising expense
advances;
2. If the
Courts deem that it is necessary to request expertise and decide to request
expertise, the involved parties, the requesters for civil matter resolution,
the appellants under appellate trial procedure must pay the expertising expense
advances;
3. If
involved parties, requesters for civil matter resolution, appellants whose
applications for expertise request are rejected by the Courts request other
organizations/individuals to conduct expertises, the expertising expense
advances shall be paid according to provisions of the Law on judicial
expertise.
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In cases
where the parties do not otherwise agree or the law does not otherwise
prescribe, the obligation to bear expertising expenses shall be determined as
follows:
1. The
persons who request for expertising request must bear the expertising expenses
if the expertising results prove that their requests are groundless. If the
expertising results prove that their requests are partially grounded, they must
pay the expertising expenses for the requested parts that are proved groundless;
2. The
persons who do not accept the expertising requests of other involved parties to
the cases must pay the expertising expenses if the expertising results prove
that the expertising requests are well grounded. If the expertising results
prove that the requests are partially grounded, the persons who do not accept
the expertising requests must bear the expertising expenses for the requested
parts that are proved well-grounded;
3. For
termination of case resolution specified in point c clause 1 Article 217 and
point b clause 1 Article 299 of this Code, the plaintiffs must bear the
expertising expenses.
For cases
where the appellate trial is terminated as prescribed in point b clause 1
Article 289 and clause 3 Article 296 of this Code, the appellants under
appellate procedure must bear the expertising expenses;
4. If a
person himself/herself requests for expertises as prescribed in clause 3
Article 160 of this Code and the expertising results prove that his/her
expertising request is well-grounded, the losing party must bear the
expertising expenses. If the expertising results prove that their expertising
requests are partially grounded, they must pay the expertising expenses for
their requested parts that are proved groundless;
5. For
other cases where case resolution is terminated as prescribed in this Code,
those who request for expertise must bear the expertising expenses.
Article 162. Handling of paid expertising expense advances
1. In
cases where the persons who have advanced expertising expenses do not have to
pay the expertising expenses, the persons who must pay the expertising expenses
under Court decisions must refund the money to the persons who have paid them.
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Article 163. Property valuation expense advances, property
valuation expenses
1. The
property valuation expense advance means a sum of money estimated by the
Evaluation Boards for valuation conducted under a Court decision.
2.
Valuation expenses are the reasonable and necessary sums of money to be paid
for the valuation and calculated by the Valuation Boards on the basis of law
provisions.
Article 164. Obligation to advance property valuation
expenses
In cases
where the involved parties do not otherwise agree or the law does not otherwise
prescribe, the obligation to pay property valuation expenses shall be
determined as follows:
1. The
persons requesting for property valuation must pay the property valuation
expense advances;
2. In
cases where the involved parties could not agree on the prices and request the
Courts to conduct the property valuation, each party must pay half of the
property valuation expense advances. If there are multiple involved parties, all
parties must pay the property valuation expense advances at rates decided by
the Courts;
3. For
cases specified in clause 3 Article 104 of this Code, the plaintiffs/appellants
must pay the property valuation expense advances.
Article 165. Obligation to bear property valuation/price
appraisal expenses
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1.
Involved parties must bear the property valuation expenses if their requests
are not accepted by the Courts;
2. In
case where the Court is requested to divide a common property, each person who
has received a share from such property must bear the property valuation expense
amount proportionate to the value of the property share he/she has received;
3. In
cases where the Courts issue decisions on property valuation prescribed in
point c clause 3 Article 104 of this Code, the obligation to bear the property
valuation expenses shall be determined as follows:
a)
Involved parties must bear the property valuation expenses prescribed in clause
1 of this Article if the valuation results prove that the property valuation
decisions of the Courts are well-grounded;
b) The
Courts shall pay the property valuation expenses if the valuation results prove
that the property valuation decisions of the Courts are groundless.
4. For
termination of case resolution specified in point c clause 1 Article 217 and
point b clause 1 Article 299 of this Code, if the Evaluation Boards have
conducted the valuation, the plaintiffs must bear the property valuation
expenses.
For cases
where the appellate trial is terminated as prescribed in point b clause 1
Article 289 and clause 3 Article 296 of this Code, if the Evaluation Boards
have conducted the valuation, the appellants under appellate procedure must
bear the property valuation expenses;
5. For
other termination of case resolution as prescribed in this Code, if the
Evaluation Boards have conducted the valuation, the requesters for property
valuation must bear the property valuation expenses;
6. The
obligation to bear the property valuation expenses of involved parties shall be
in accordance with the obligation to bear the property valuation expenses
specified in clauses 1, 2, 4 and 5 of this Article.
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1. In
cases where the persons who have advanced property valuation expenses do not
have to pay the valuation expenses, the persons who must pay the valuation
expenses under Court decisions must refund the money to the persons who have
paid them.
2. In
cases where the persons who have advanced the property valuation expenses are
obliged to pay them, but the advanced amounts are not enough to cover the
actual valuation expenses, such persons must pay the deficits. If the advanced
sums exceed the actual valuation expenses, the surpluses shall be refunded to
the persons who have advanced the money.
Article 167. Expenses for witnesses
1.
Reasonable and actual expenses for witnesses shall be borne by the involved
parties.
2. The
persons who request the Courts to summon witnesses must bear the expenses for
such witnesses, if the testimonies of the witnesses are true but not right for
the demands of the person requesting to summon such witnesses. If the
testimonies are true and right for the demands of the persons requesting to
summon such witnesses, the expenses must be borne by the party making requests
independent from the former's requests.
Article 168. Expenses for interpreters and lawyers
1.
Expenses for interpreters mean sum of money payable to interpreters in the
course of settling civil cases as agreed upon by the involved parties and the
interpreters or stipulated by law.
2.
Expenses for lawyers mean sums of money payable to lawyers as agreed upon by
the involved parties and the lawyers within the prescribed scope of the
law-practicing organization and according to law provisions.
3.
Expenses for interpreters or lawyers shall be borne by the persons requesting
such interpreters or lawyers, except otherwise agreed upon by the parties.
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Article 169. Specific regulations on procedural expenses
Pursuant
to regulations in this Code, the Standing committee of the National Assembly of
the Socialist Republic of Vietnam shall issue specific regulations on expense
of overseas request for judicial assistance, costs of on-site inspection and
appraisal, costs of expertise and price appraisal of properties; cost of
payment for witnesses and interpreters; other procedural costs prescribed in
other laws and the exemption and decrease of procedural costs during the case
settlement.
Chapter X
ISSUANCE, SENDING AND NOTIFICATION OF
PROCEDURAL DOCUMENTS
Article 170. Obligation to issue, send or notify procedural
documents
The
courts, the procuracies and the judgment-executing bodies shall issue, send or
notify procedural documents to the involved parties, other participants in
procedures and relevant agencies, organizations and individuals according to
the provisions of this Code and relevant law provisions.
Article 171. Procedural documents to be issued, sent or
notified
1.
Announcements, written notices, summons, invitations in civil procedures.
2.
Judgments and decisions of courts.
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4. Other
procedural documents prescribed by law.
Article 172. Persons effecting the issuance, sending or
notification of procedural documents
The
issuance, sending or notification of procedural documents shall be carried out
by the following persons:
1. Civil
proceeding officers or people of the procedure document-promulgating agencies
who are tasked to issue, send or notify procedural documents;
2. The
commune-level People's Committees of the localities where the civil procedure
participants reside or the agencies or organizations where the civil procedure
participants work when so requested by courts;
3. The
involved parties, their representatives or the defense counsels of the involved
parties' legitimate rights and interests in the cases prescribed by this Code;
4. Postal
service organization officers;
5.
Persons with sending function;
6. Other
persons defined by law.
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The
issuance, sending or notification of procedural documents may be effected by
the following modes:
1.
Issuance, sending or notification effected directly or by post office or by the
third persons who are authorized to effect the issuance, sending or
notification;
2.
Issuance, sending or notification effected by electronic means at the request
of the involved parties or other participants in accordance with law
regulations on electronic transaction;
3. Public
posting;
4.
Announcement on the mass media;
5.
Issuance, sending or notification effected by other modes prescribed in Chapter
XXXVIII of this Code.
Article 174. Validity of the issuance, sending or
notification of procedural documents
1. The
issuance, sending or notification of procedural documents, which is carried out
in accordance with this Code, shall be considered valid.
2. The
persons who are obliged to effect the issuance, sending or notification of
procedural documents must comply with the provisions of this Code.
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Article 175. Procedures for issuance, sending or
notification of procedural documents
1. The
persons effecting the issuance, sending or notification of procedural documents
must directly hand the relevant procedural documents to the persons to whom
such documents are issued, sent or notified. The latter must sign in the
minutes or books recording the delivery and receipt of procedural documents.
The time for calculating the procedural time limit is the date when they are
issued or sent with, or notified of, the procedural documents.
2.
Procedural documents that are issued, sent or notified by post office must be
registered mails that are certified by the receivers.
Certified
documents must be returned to the Courts.
Time
limit for conducting civil procedures shall be calculated from the day on which
the receivers certify that they have received the procedural documents from the
post office.
Article 176. Procedures for issuance, sending or
notification of procedural documents by electronic means
The
issuance, sending and notification of procedural documents by electronic means
shall be conformable to law on electronic transaction.
The
Supreme People’s Court shall provide guidance on the implementation of this
Article.
Article 177. Procedures for direct issuance, sending or
notification to individuals
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2. If the
persons to whom procedural documents are issued, sent or notified are
individuals, the procedural documents must be delivered directly to them.
Involved parties must sign the minutes of receipt as prescribed in clause 1
Article 175 of this Code.
3. If the
persons to whom the procedural documents are issued, sent or notified have
moved to new residences and have notified the Courts of the change of
residences, such procedural documents must be sent to their new residences.
Involved parties must append signatures or fingerprints on the minutes of
receipt as prescribed in clause 1 Article 175 of this Code. If such involved
parties failed to notify the Courts of the change of residences and the new
addresses, the Courts shall comply with provisions of Articles 179 and 180 of
this Code.
4. Where
the persons to whom the procedural documents are issued, sent or notified
refuse to receive such documents, the issuers, senders or notifiers must make records
thereon clearly stating reasons therefor, with certification by population
group leaders or police offices of communes of their refusal. The records must
be recorded in the case files.
5. If the
persons to whom the procedural documents are issued/sent/notified are absent
from the residences, the issuers/senders/notifiers must make records and
deliver the documents to their relatives who have fully civil capacity living
with them or to their population group leaders, then ask such relatives or
population group leaders to append signatures or fingerprints on the minutes of
receipt and to undertake to directly deliver the documents to the to
be-issued/sent/notified persons. The records must be recorded in the case
files.
If the
persons to whom the procedural documents are issued/sent/notified are absent
from the residences and the time they return is indefinite or their new
residences are unknown, the issuers/senders/notifiers must make a records
therein with certification of the population group leaders or Police offices of
communes; simultaneously, conduct the public posting procedures of the to
be-sent documents according to regulations in Article 179 of this Code. The
records must be recorded in the case files.
Article 178. Procedures for direct issuance, sending or
notification to agencies, organizations
1. Where
the persons to whom the procedural documents are issued, sent or notified are
agencies or organizations, the procedural documents must be delivered directly
to their representatives at law or persons responsible for the receipt thereof,
who must sign the receipts. Where the agencies or organizations to which the
documents are issued, sent or notified have their representatives to
participate in the civil procedure or to receive the procedural documents, such
persons shall sign for the receipt thereof. The date of signing for receipt
shall be regarded as the date of issuance, sending or notification.
2. If the
persons to whom the procedural documents are issued, sent or notified refuse to
receive such documents or are absent, provisions in clauses 4 and 5 Article 177
of this Code shall be complied with.
Article 179. Procedures for public posting
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2. The
public posting of procedural documents shall be conducted by Courts directly,
or by persons with sending function or commune-level People's Committees of the
localities where the involved parties reside or where the
agencies/organizations are headquartered that are authorized by the Courts
according to the following procedures:
a)
Posting the originals of the procedural documents at the offices of the Courts
or the commune-level People's Committees of the localities where the persons to
whom the documents are issued, sent or notified reside or reside last, or where
the agencies/organizations to which the documents are issued, sent or notified are headquartered
or headquartered last;
b)
Posting the copies thereof at the places of residence or last residence of such
persons to whom the documents are issued, sent or notified; or at the
headquarters or last headquarters of the agencies/organizations to which the
documents are issued/sent or notified;
c) Making
records on the public-posting procedures, clearly stating the date of posting.
3. The
duration for public posting of procedural documents is 15 days as from the date
of posting.
Article 180. Procedures for announcement on the mass media
1. The
announcement on the mass media shall be effected only when it is so provided
for by law or when there are grounds to believe that the public posting does
not guarantee that the persons to whom the procedural documents are issued,
sent or notified get the information on such documents.
2. The
announcement on the mass media can be effected if so requested by the other
involved parties. In this case, the fees for announcement on the mass media
shall be borne by the announcement requesters.
3.
Announcement on the mass media shall be published on e-portals of the Courts,
on one of central dailies for three consecutive issues, and broadcasted on the
central radio or television channels three times for 03 consecutive days.
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Where the
persons that issue, send or notify the procedural documents are neither Courts
nor procedural document-issuing agencies, nor their officials, such persons
must immediately notify the results of issuance, sending or notification of
procedural documents to the Courts or the agencies issuing such procedural
documents.
Chapter XI
PROCEDURAL TIME LIMITS
Article 182. Procedural time limits
1. The
procedural time limit is a period of time which is determined from this point
of time to another point of time for the procedure-conducting persons,
procedure participants or relevant agencies, organizations and individuals to
perform procedural acts prescribed by this Code.
2. The
procedural time limit can be determined in hour, day, week, month, year or an
event which may occur.
Article 183. Application of the Civil Code's regulations on
time limits
The
method of calculating the procedural time limits, the regulations on procedural
time limits, the starting time and the ending time of the procedural time
limits in this Code shall comply with the corresponding provisions of the Civil
Code.
Article 184. The statute of limitations for lawsuits, the
statute of limitations for requests for civil matter resolution
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2. The
Courts shall apply the regulations on statute of limitations according to the
requests for application of statute of limitations of one or multiple sides,
provided that such requests are made before the first-instance Courts issue the
judgments/decisions on such matters/cases.
The
persons to get benefits from the application of statute of limitations may
refuse to apply the statute of limitations, unless such refusal is to avoid
their performance of obligations.
Article 185. Application of the Civil Code's regulations on
statute of limitations
The Civil
Code's regulations on statute of limitations shall apply in civil procedures.
PART TWO
PROCEDURES FOR SETTLING CASES AT
FIRST-INSTANCE COURTS
Chapter XII
INSTITUTION AND ACCEPTANCE OF CASES
Article 186. Right to institute cases
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Article 187. Right to institute civil lawsuits to protect
legitimate rights and interests of other persons, public interests and/or the
State's interests
1. Family
affair authorities, children affair authorities and Vietnam Women's Union,
within their tasks and power, may initiate lawsuits pertaining to marriage and
family as prescribed in Law on marriage and family.
2.
Employee collective’s representative organizations shall have the right to
institute labor cases where it is necessary to protect the legitimate rights
and interests of the employee collective or where authorized by the employees
as prescribed by law.
3. Social
organizations protecting interests of consumers shall have the right to
represent consumers to institute lawsuits to protect interests of consumers or
institute lawsuits themselves for public interests according to provisions of
the Law on protection of consumers’ interests.
4. Agencies
and organizations shall, within the scope of their respective tasks and powers,
have the right to institute civil lawsuits to request Courts to protect the
public interests and/or the State’s interests in the domains under their
respective charge or according to law provisions.
5.
Individuals shall have the right to institute lawsuits pertaining to marriage
and family to protect legitimate rights and benefits of other people according
to regulations on marriage and family.
Article 188. Scope of initiation of lawsuits
1. An
agency, organization or individual may initiate a lawsuit against another or
many other agencies, organizations and/or individuals regarding one legal
relation or many interrelated legal relations for settlement in the same case.
2.
Multiple agencies, organizations and/or individuals may initiate a lawsuit
against another agency, organization or individual regarding one legal relation
or many interrelated legal relations for settlement in the same case.
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Article 189. Form and contents of a lawsuit petition
1.
Individuals, agencies and organizations initiating lawsuits must prepare their
petitions.
2.
Individuals shall draw up petitions as follows:
a)
Individuals with fully civil procedure act capacity may draw up petitions
themselves or request other persons to draw up petitions. Names and residential
addresses of such individuals shall be written at the blanks for names and
addresses of the litigators; at the end of the petitions, there shall be
signatures or fingerprints of such individuals;
b)
Regarding individuals being minors, legally incapacitated persons, persons with
limited cognition or behavior control, their lawful representatives may draw up
petitions themselves or request other persons to draw up petitions. Names and
residential addresses of such individuals shall be written at blanks for names
and addresses of the litigators; at the end of the petitions, there shall be
signatures or fingerprints of the lawful representatives;
c)
Individuals of cases specified in points a and b of this clause who are
illiterate or have visual disabilities or who cannot draw up petitions or
append signatures or fingerprints themselves may request other persons to help
them draw up the petitions under the witnessing of persons with fully civil
procedure capacity. The witnesses must append their signatures on the
petitions.
3. If
litigators are agencies or organizations, the lawful representatives of such
agencies/organizations may draw up themselves or request other persons to draw
up petitions. Names and residential addresses of such agencies/organizations
and full names and positions of their lawful representatives shall be written
at the blanks for names and address of litigators; at the end of the petitions,
there shall be signatures and seals of the lawful representatives of such
agencies/organizations. If the litigators are enterprises, the use of seals
must comply with regulations in the Law on Enterprise.
4. A
lawsuit petition must include the following principal contents:
a) Date
of its making;
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c) Name,
place of residence, place of work of the litigator (applicable to litigators
being individuals) or head office of the litigator (applicable to litigators
being agencies/organizations); phone number, fax and e-mail address (if any).
If the
parties reach agreement on an address for the Court to contact, such address
shall be specified;
d) Name,
place of residence, place of work of person whose interests and duties are
protected (applicable to individuals) or head office of person whose interests
and duties are protected (applicable to agencies and organizations); phone
number, fax and e-mail address (if any);
dd) Name,
place of residence, place of work of the defendant (applicable to individuals)
or head office of the defendant (applicable to agencies/organizations); phone
number, fax and e-mail address (if any). If the place of residence, place of
work or head office of the defendant is indefinite, the last place of
residence, place of work or head office of the defendant shall be specified;
e) Name,
place of residence, place of work of person with relevant interests and duties
(applicable to individuals) or head office of person with relevant interests
and duties (applicable to agencies and organizations); phone number, fax and
e-mail address (if any).
If the
place of residence, place of work or head office of the person with relevant
interests and duties is indefinite, the last place of residence, place of work
or head office of the defendant shall be specified;
g) Lawful
interests and duties of the litigator that are infringed upon; specific matters
of the defendant, person with relevant interests and duties that are applied
for resolution by the Court;
h) Names
and addresses of witnesses (if any);
i) List
of documents and/or evidences accompanied with lawsuit petitions.
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Article 190. Submission of lawsuit petitions to courts
1.
Litigators shall submit their lawsuit petitions and the accompanied documents
and/or evidences to Courts competent to settle their cases by the following
modes:
a) Direct
submission at courts;
b)
Sending to Courts by post;
c)
Sending through e-portal of Courts (if any).
2. Date
of initiation of lawsuits is the day on which the Courts receive the petitions submitted
by involved parties or the date written on the seals of the post office where
the petitions are sent from.
In cases
where the date cannot be identified through the seals of the sending post
offices, the date of initiation of lawsuit shall be the day on which the
involved parties send the petitions from the post offices. Involved parties
shall prove the day on which they sent the petitions from the post offices;
otherwise, the date of initiation of lawsuit shall be the day on which the
Courts receive the petitions delivered by the post offices.
3. If the
litigators send the petitions through e-portal, the date of initiation of
lawsuit shall be the day on which the petitions are sent.
4. If the
cases are transferred to other Courts as prescribed in Article 41 of this Code,
the date of initiation of lawsuit shall be the day on which the petitions are
sent to the Courts which have accepted the petitions ultra vires and shall be
determined according to provisions in clause 2 and 3 of this Article.
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Article 191. Procedures for receiving and processing
lawsuit petitions
1.
Courts, via petition receiving divisions, must receive lawsuit petitions lodged
by litigators directly or via post and must record them in the petition
registers. If the petitions are sent through the e-portal, the Courts shall
make printing copies of the petitions and must record them in the petition
registers.
When
receiving petitions that are submitted directly, Courts shall immediately issue
the receiving slip for the litigators. For petitions sent by post, within 02
working days from the day on which the petitions are received, the Courts shall
send the litigators notifications of the receipt of the petitions. If the
petitions are sent through the e-portal, the Courts shall immediately notify
the litigators of the receipt of the petitions via their e-portal (if any).
2. Within
03 working days from the day on which the petitions are received, the Chief
Justices of Courts shall assign one Judge to review the petitions.
3. Within
05 working days from the day on which they are assigned, the Judges shall
review the petitions and make one of the following decisions:
a) To request
for amendment and/or supplementation of lawsuit petitions;
b) To
carry out the acceptance procedures of the cases according to normal procedures
or simplified procedures, if the cases are satisfied for resolution according
to simplified procedures as prescribed in clause 1 Article 317 of this Code;
c) To
transfer the lawsuit petitions to competent Courts and notify the litigators
thereof if the cases fall under other courts' jurisdiction;
d) To
return the lawsuit petitions to the litigators if such cases do not fall under
the court's jurisdiction.
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Article 192. Return of lawsuit petitions, consequences of
the return of lawsuit petitions
1. The
Courts shall return the lawsuit petitions in the following cases:
a) The
petitioners have no right to initiate a lawsuit as prescribed in Articles 186
and 187 of this Code or do not have full civil procedure act capacity;
b)
Conditions for initiating lawsuits prescribed by law are not fully satisfied.
Cases
where conditions for initiating lawsuits are not fully satisfied are cases
where there are provisions about conditions for initiating lawsuits but the
litigators initiate lawsuits when any of such conditions has not been
satisfied;
c) The
matters have been resolved by effective judgments or decisions of Courts or
legally binding decisions of competent State agencies, except for cases where
the Courts reject the applications for divorce, for change in child adoption,
change of alimony levels or damage compensation levels, or applications for
change of property manager, change of inherited-property manager, change of
guardian or cases of the reclaim of leased or lent properties or houses leased,
lent or offered for other people's free-of-charge stay, which have not been
recognized by Court and eligible for re-initiation of lawsuits as prescribed by
law;
d) After
the time limit specified in clause 2 Article 195 of this Code, the litigators
fail to submit the receipts of Court fee advances to the Courts, except for
cases they are exempt or do not have to pay the Court fee advances or there are
objective obstacles or force majeure events;
dd) The
cases do not fall under the courts' jurisdiction;
e) The
litigators fail to amend or supplement the petitions at the request of the
Judges as prescribed in clause 2 Article 193 of this Code.
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If
in the petitions, the litigators failed to declare sufficiently or
accurately names and addresses of defendants and/or persons with relevant
interests and duties and fail to make
amendment/supplement according to the requests of the Judges, the Judges shall
return the petitions to the litigators;
g)
The litigators withdraw the petitions.
2. When returning the petitions and the enclosed materials and evidences to the
litigators, the Judges shall make writings containing reasons for the return of
the petitions and send them to the litigators and the procuracies of the same
levels. Petitions and materials and evidences that the Judges return to the
litigators must be photocopied and retained at the Court to serve as the basis
for settlement of the complaints/recommendations on request.
3. Involved parties may re-submit the petitions in the
following cases:
a)
The litigators have fully had civil procedure
act capacity;
b)
The petitions for divorces, for change in child adoption, change of alimony
levels or damage compensation levels, or petitions for change of property
manager, change of inherited-property manager, change of guardian or cases of
the reclaim of leased or lent properties or houses leased, lent or offered for
other people's free-of-charge stay have not been recognized by Court and are
eligible for re-initiation of lawsuits as prescribed by law;
c)
Requirements for initiating lawsuits have been fully satisfied;
d)
Other cases prescribed by law.
4. The Supreme
People’s Court shall provide guidance on the
implementation of clauses 1 and 3 of this Article.
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1. In
cases where a lawsuit petition does not fully contain the details prescribed in
Clause 4, Article 189 of this Code, the Court shall make written notification
of such to the litigator for amendment and/or supplementation within a time
limit set by the Judge, which, however, must not exceed 01 month; for special
cases, the Judge may extend that time limit but for not more than 15 days. The
written notification shall be sent directly, online or by post to the litigator
and must be recorded to the petition register for supervision. Duration of
amendment/supplement shall not be included in the statute of limitations of
lawsuit initiation.
2. In
cases where the litigators have amended and/or supplemented their lawsuit
petitions strictly according to the provisions of Clause 4, Article 189 of this
Code, the Courts shall continue processing the cases; if they fail to amend
and/or supplement their lawsuit petitions as requested, the Judges shall return
the petitions as well as materials and evidences to the litigators.
Article 194. Complaints, recommendations about the return
of lawsuit petitions and settlement thereof
1. Within
10 days from the day on which the returned petitions are received, the
litigators may file their complaints, or the procuracies may file recommendations
to the Courts which have returned the lawsuit petitions.
2.
Immediately after the complaints, recommendations about the return of lawsuit
petitions are received, the Chief Justices of the Courts shall assign other
Judges to review and settle such complaints/recommendations.
3. Within
05 working days from the day on which they are assigned, the Judges shall hold
meeting to review and settle the complaints/recommendations. Such meeting must
be under the attendance of representatives of procuracies of the same levels
and involved parties filing the complaints; if the involved parties are absent,
the sessions shall be carried out under the direction of the Judges.
4.
Pursuant to materials and evidences related to the return of lawsuit petitions,
opinions of representatives of procuracies and involved parties filing
complaints at the meetings, the Judge shall make one of the following
decisions:
a) To
remain the return of lawsuit petitions and notify the involved parties and
procuracies of the same level;
b) To
receive back the lawsuit petitions and accompanied materials as well as
evidences in order to process the cases.
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6. Within
10 days from the day on which the complaints/recommendations pertaining to the
return of the lawsuit petitions are received, the Chief Justices of the
directly superior Courts must make one of the following decisions:
a) To
uphold the return of the lawsuit petitions;
b) To
request the first-instance Courts to receive back the lawsuit petitions and
accompanied materials as well as evidences in order to process the cases.
The
decisions on settlement of complaints/recommendations of the Chief Justices of
the Courts of the directly superior shall be immediately effective and shall be
sent to the litigators, procuracies of the same level, the procuracies filing
the recommendation and the Courts having issued the decisions on return of the
petitions.
7. If
there are grounds to determine that the decisions of Chief Justice of the
immediate superior Court prescribed in clause 6 of this Article are contrary to
the law, then within 10 days from the day on which the decisions are received,
the involved parties may file complaints or the procuracies may file recommendations
to the Chief Justices of the Collegial People’s Courts (applicable to cases
where the decisions subject to complaint/recommendation are issued by the
People’s Courts of provinces) or to the Chief Justice of the Supreme People’s
Court (applicable to cases where the decisions subject to
complaint/recommendation are issued by Collegial People’s Courts)
Within 10
days as from the day on which the complaints of the involved parties or the
recommendations of the procuracies are received, the Chief Justices must
consider and settle them. Decision of
the Chief Justices shall be the final one.
Article 195. Accepting cases
1. After
receiving lawsuit petitions and accompanied materials and/or evidences, if
deeming that the cases fall within the courts’ jurisdiction, the Judges shall
immediately notify the litigators thereof so that they may come to Courts for
carrying out procedures to advance the Court fees in cases where they are
liable thereto.
2. The
Judges shall estimate the Court fee advance amounts, write them down on the
notices and hand them to the litigators for payment of Court fee advances.
Within 07 days as from the day on which the courts' notices on payment of Court
fee advances are received, the litigators must pay such advances and submit the
receipts for payment of Court fee advances.
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4. In
cases where the litigators are exempt from, or not required to pay, Court fee
advances, the Judges must accept the petitions upon receiving the lawsuit
petitions and accompanied materials and/or evidences.
Article 196. Notice on acceptance of cases
1. Within
03 working days from the day on which the cases are accepted, the Judge must
send written notices to plaintiffs, defendants, agencies, organizations and
individuals with rights and obligations related to the settlement of the cases,
to the procuracies of the same level on the Courts’ acceptances of the cases.
Regarding
cases initiated by consumers, the Courts shall post publicly at the offices of
the Courts information about the acceptance of the cases within 03 working days
from the day on which the cases are accepted.
2. Such a
written notice must contain the following principal details:
a) Date
on which the notice is made;
b) Name
and address of the Court accepting the case;
c) Name,
address; phone number, fax, e-mail address (if any) of the litigator;
d)
Specific matters that the litigator for request the Court to resolve;
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e) List
of materials and evidences submitted together with the lawsuit petition by the
litigator;
g) Time
limit for the defendant and/ or person with relevant interests and duties to
submit to the Court opinions in writing towards the request of the litigator
and accompanied materials and evidences, counter-claims, independent claims (if
any);
h) Legal
consequences of case where the defendant and/or person with relevant interests
and duties fail to submit to the Court opinion in writing for the petition for
initiating lawsuit.
3. If the
plaintiffs file application for the assistance of the Court in the sending of
materials and evidences, the notices on the acceptance of the cases that the
Courts sent to the defendants and/or persons with relevant interests and duties
copies of materials and evidences provided by the plaintiffs.
Article 197. Assigning Judges to settle cases
1. On the
basis of the reports on the acceptance of the cases made by the Judges assigned
to accept the petitions, the Chief Justices of the Courts shall give decision
on assignment of Judges to settle the cases, ensuring the principle of
impartiality, objectiveness and contingency.
2. Within
03 working days from the day on which a case is accepted, the court's Chief
Justice shall assign a Judge to resolve the case.
For
complicated cases and the settlement seemed to be long-lasting, the Chief
Justices of the Courts shall assign alternate Judges to ensure the on-schedule
settlement as prescribed by the Code.
3. In the
course of settling the case, if the assigned Judge cannot continue with the
assigned task, the Chief Justice of the Court shall assign another Judge to
continue that work; in cases where the trial is being underway without the
alternate Judge, the case must be retried from the beginning and the Court must
notify the involved parties and the procuracies of the same levels of the
retrial.
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1. Set up
the case files as prescribed in Article 204 of this Code.
2.
Request the involved parties to submit materials and evidences to courts.
3. Verify
the case and collect evidences according to the provisions of Clauses 2 and 3,
Article 97 of this Code.
Article 199.
Rights and duties of defendants and persons with relevant interests and duties
after receiving the notices
1. Within
15 days from the day on which the notices are received, defendants and/or
persons with relevant interests and duties must submit to the Court opinions in
writing towards the request of the plaintiffs and materials and evidences,
counter-claims and independent claims (if any).
Any
defendant or person with relevant interests and duties wishing to have such
time limit extended must submit to the Court an application for time extension
stating the reasons for such extension; if the application is well-grounded,
the Court shall grant the extension that must not exceed 15 days.
2.
Defendants or persons with relevant interests and duties are entitled to
request the Court to allow them to see, take notes or make photocopies of the
petitions and materials and evidences enclosed therewith, except for materials
and evidences specified in clause 2 Article 109 of this Code.
Article 200. Defendants' right to make counter-claims
1.
Together with their obligation to submit to Courts their written opinions on
the plaintiffs' claims, the defendants are entitled to file counter-claims
against the plaintiffs or persons with relevant interests and duties who have
made independent claims.
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a) The
counter-claims are made to clear liability against the plaintiffs' claims
and/or persons with relevant interests and duties with independent claims;
b) The
accepted counter-claims may exclude the partial or full acceptance of the
plaintiffs' claims and/or persons with relevant interests and duties who have
made independent claims;
c) There
is an interrelation between the counter-claim and the claim of the
plaintiff/person with relevant interests and duties, and if these claims are
settled in the same case, the resolution of such claims in the same case shall
be more accurate and quicker.
3.
Defendants are entitled to make counter-claims before the opening of the
meetings for checking the handover of, access to and disclosure of evidences
and mediating.
Article 201. Right of persons with related interests and
obligations to make independent claims
1. In
cases where the persons with related interests and obligations do not
participate in the procedures on the side of the plaintiff or the defendant,
they shall be entitled to make independent claims when the following conditions
are met:
a) The
resolution of the case is related to their interests and obligations;
b) Their
independent claims are related to the case being settled;
c) If
their independent claims are settled in the same case, the resolution of such
case shall be more accurate and quicker.
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Article 202. Procedures for making counter-claims or
independent claims
The
procedures for making counter-claims or independent claims shall comply with
this Code’s regulations on procedures for initiating lawsuits by plaintiffs.
Chapter XIII
MEDIATION AND TRIAL PREPARATION PROCEDURES
Article 203. Time limit for trial preparation
1. The
time limits for preparation for trial over cases of various types, except for
cases resolved under simplified procedures or cases involving foreign elements
are specified as follows:
a) For
the cases prescribed in Articles 26 and 28 of this Code, the time limit shall
be 04 months counting from the day on which the cases are accepted;
b) For
the cases prescribed in Articles 30 and 32 of this Code, the time limit shall
be 02 months counting from the day on which the cases are accepted.
For
complicated cases, or when due to force majeure events or objective obstacles,
the Chief Justices of Courts may decide to extend the trial preparation time
limits but for not more than 02 months for cases prescribed in Point a of this
clause and 01 month for cases prescribed in Point b of this clause.
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2. In the
process of trial preparation, the Judge shall carry out the following tasks and
power:
a) Set up
the case files as prescribed in Article 198 of this Code;
b)
Determine the status of the involved parties and other participants in the
procedure;
c)
Determine the disputing relationship between involved parties and the
applicable law provisions;
d)
Examine objective details of the cases;
dd)
Verify the cases and collect evidences according to the regulations in this
Code;
e) Apply
provisional emergency measures;
g) Hold
meetings for checking the handover of, access to and disclosure of evidences
and mediating according to provisions of this Code, except for cases resolved
under simplified procedures;
h)
Fulfill other tasks and power as prescribed in this Code.
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a) To
recognize the agreement between the involved parties;
b) To
suspend the resolution of the civil lawsuit;
c) To
terminate the resolution of the civil lawsuit;
d) To
bring the case to trial.
4. Within
01 month from the day on which the decision to bring the case to trial is
issued, the Court must open a Court session. In case of good and sufficient
reason, this time limit shall be 02 months.
Article 204. Documenting civil lawsuits’ files
1. A
civil lawsuit’s file shall include the petition and all the materials and
evidences provided by involved parties and other participants; materials and
evidences collected by the Courts that are related to the case; procedural
documents of the Courts and the Procuracies about the resolution of such civil
lawsuit.
2. All
papers and documents in the civil-case file must be numbered and
arranged by date. Newer papers shall be put above the older ones; such papers
shall be managed, retained and used according to law provisions.
Article 205. Principle for conducting mediation
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2. The
mediation must be conducted on the following principles:
a)
Respect for the voluntary agreement of the involved parties, non-use of force
or non-threat to use force to compel the involved parties to reach agreements
against their will;
b) The
contents of agreements between the involved parties must not contravene law and
social ethics.
Article 206. Civil lawsuits which must not be mediated
1. Claims
for compensation for damage caused to State properties.
2. Civil
lawsuits arising from civil transactions which are contrary to law or social
ethics.
Article 207. Civil lawsuits which cannot be mediated
1. The
defendants or the persons with relevant interests and duties are intentionally
absent though having been duly summoned twice by courts.
2. The
involved parties cannot take part in the mediation for plausible reasons.
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4. One of
involved parties applies for non-mediation.
Article 208. Notification about meetings for checking the
handover of, access to and disclosure of evidences and mediating
1. The
Judges shall hold meetings for checking the handover of, access to and
disclosure of evidences and mediating between involved parties. Before holding
the meetings, the Judges shall notify the involved parties, their lawful
representatives and defense counsels of their rights and interests of time,
venue and contents of the meetings.
2. If the
mediation over the civil lawsuits as cannot be conducted as prescribed in
Articles 206 and 207 of this Code, the Judge shall hold the meetings for
checking the handover of, access to and disclosure of evidences without
mediation.
3.
Regarding marriage and family cases involving minors, before hold the meetings
for checking the handover of, access to and disclosure of evidences and mediating
between involved parties, the Judges and/or Ombudspersons assigned by the
Courts shall collect materials and evidences to determine reasons for the
arising of the disputes. When it is deemed necessary, the Judges may refer to
opinions of family affair authorities and children affair authorities about the
situations of the families, reasons for the arising of disputes and the
expectation of the wives, husbands and children related to the cases.
Regarding
disputes over child rearing after divorces or change of post-divorce child
custodian, the Judges shall depend on the expectation of the children who are
underage and not younger than 7; when it is deemed necessary, representatives
of family affair authorities and children affair authorities shall witness and
contribute opinions. The collection of expectation of underage children and the
conduct of other procedures for minors must be friendly, suitable for the
psychology, age, mature level and the awareness of the minors, ensuring
legitimate rights and interests and personal secret of minors.
Article 209. Participants in meetings for checking the
handover of, access to and disclosure of evidences and mediating
1.
Participants in the meetings shall include:
a) The
meeting presiding Judge;
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c)
Involved or lawful representatives of involved parties;
d)
Representatives of employee collective’s representative organizations,
applicable to labor cases, at the request of employees, excluding labor cases
where employee collective’s representative organizations or defense counsels of
rights and interests of employees’ collectives/employees attend as representative organizations of employees’
collective. If the representatives of employee
collective’s representative organizations do not attend the meeting for
mediating, written opinions must be submitted;
dd)
Defense counsels of rights and interests of involved parties (if any);
e)
Interpreters (if any).
2. W hen
it is deemed necessary, the Judges shall request relevant individuals, agencies
and organizations to participate in the meetings; for cases pertaining to
marriage and families, the Judges shall request representatives of family
affair authorities, children affair authorities and/or Vietnam Women's Union to
participate in the meetings; if they are absent, the meetings shall be still
conducted.
3. In
cases where any of involved parties is absent but involved parties who attend
agree to conduct the meetings and such meetings do not affect rights and
obligations of absent involved parties, the Judges shall conduct meetings
between involved parties who attend; if involved parties request to postpone
the mediation meeting until all involved parties attend, the Judge must follow
their request. The Judges must notify the involved parties of such postponement
and the resuming of the meetings.
Article 210. Order of meetings for checking the handover
of, access to and disclosure of evidences and mediating
1. Before
conducting the meetings, Court clerks shall report the Judges about the absence
and attendance of participants in the meetings that had received notifications
from the Courts. The Judges presiding
over the meetings shall recheck the attendance
and ID cards of participants then provide involved parties with information
about their rights and obligations according to provisions of this Code.
2. When
checking the handover of, access to and disclosure of evidences, the Judges
shall announce materials and evidences in case files and ask the involved
parties about the following matters:
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b)
Materials and evidences that have been submitted to the Courts and the delivery
of materials and evidences to other involved parties;
c) The
amendment of materials/evidences; requests for collection of materials and
evidences by the Courts; requests for summon of other involved parties by the
Courts, witnesses and other participants at the Court sessions;
d) Other
matters that the involved parties deem to be necessary.
3. When
involved parties finished their presentations, the Judges shall review opinions
and consider resolving requests of involved parties specified in clause 2 of
this Article. If the persons summoned by the Courts are absent, the Courts
shall notify them of the results of the meetings.
4.
Procedures for mediation:
a) The
Judges disseminate to involved parties the provisions of laws related to the
resolution of the cases so that involved parties can relate them with their
rights and obligations and analyze legal consequence of the success of the mediation
then voluntarily reach agreements with each other about the resolution of the
cases;
b)
Plaintiff and defense counsels of their legitimate rights and interests make
presentations of the disputes, make amendment of petitions for initiating
lawsuits; grounds for protecting the petition and express opinions about
matters to be mediated and resolution of the cases (if any);
c)
Defendants and defense counsels of their legitimate rights and interests make
presentations of the claims of the plaintiffs and about counter-claims (if
any); grounds for protesting against the petition of the plaintiffs; grounds
for defending their counter claims and express opinions about matters to be
mediated and resolution of the cases (if any);
d)
Persons with relevant interests and duties, defense counsels of their
legitimate rights and interests express their opinions about the claims of the
plaintiffs and the defendants; present their independent claims (if any);
grounds for protesting against the claims of the plaintiffs and the defendants;
grounds for protecting their independent claims and express opinions about
matters to be meditated and resolution of the cases (if any);
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e) When
involved parties and defense counsels of their legitimate rights and interests
have expressed their opinions, the Judges shall determined matters that
involved parties have or have not agreed about and request involved parties to
make additional presentation about unclear and not agreed contents;
g) The
Judges shall make conclusion of those which involved parties have agreed or not
agreed about.
Article 211. Minutes of meetings for checking the handover
of, access to and disclosure of evidences and mediating
1. Court
clerks shall be in charge of formulating minutes of meetings for checking the
handover of, access to and disclosure of evidences and for mediating.
2.
Minutes of the checking the handover of, access to and disclosure of evidences
must contain the following contents:
a) Date
of meeting;
b) Place
of meeting;
c) The
participants in the meeting;
d)
Opinions of involved parties or lawful representatives of involved parties
about contents specified in clause 2 Article 210 of this Code;
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e)
Decisions of the Court to accept or not accept claims of involved parties.
3.
Minutes of the mediation must contain the following contents:
a) Those
specified in points a, b and c clause 2 of this Article;
b)
Opinions of involved parties and defense counsels of their legitimate rights
and interests of involved parties;
c)
Contents have or have not been agreed by involved parties.
4. The
minutes must bear the signatures or fingerprints of all participants in the
meetings, signatures of the Court clerks in charge of making minutes and of the
presiding Judges of the meetings. Participants in the meetings may have a look
at the minutes immediately when the meetings finish and may request for
amendment and supplement to the minutes before appending signatures or
fingerprints.
5. If
involved parties reach agreements about matters to be resolved in civil
lawsuits, the Courts shall make minutes of successful mediation. Such minutes
shall be immediately sent to involved parties participating in the mediation.
Article 212. Issuing decisions to recognize the agreements
of the involved parties
1. Upon
the expiry of the 07-day time limit after making the records on successful
mediation, if no parties change their opinions on such agreement, the Judge who
presides over the mediation session or another Judge who has been assigned by
the court's Chief Justice shall issue a decision recognizing the agreement of
the involved parties.
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2. The
Judge shall only issue a decision to recognize the agreement of the involved
parties if they have reached an agreement on the resolution of the whole case.
3. In the
cases stipulated in Clause 4 of Article 210 of this Code, where the present
parties have reached agreement on the settlement of their case, such agreement
shall be valid only for the present persons and shall be recognized by the
Judge in a decision if it does not affect the rights and obligations of the
absent parties. In cases where such agreement affects the rights and
obligations of the absent parties, it shall be valid and recognized by the
Judge in a decision only if it is accepted in writing by the parties that are
absent from the mediation session.
Article 213. Effect of decisions to recognize the involved
parties' agreements
1. The
decisions to recognize the involved parties' agreements shall take effect
immediately after they are issued and are not appealed against according to the
appellate procedures.
2. The
decisions to recognize the involved parties' agreements may be appealed against
according to the cassation procedures only if there are grounds to believe that
such agreements were reached as a result of mistakes, deceptions, intimidation,
force or they contravene law or social ethics.
Article 214. Suspension of the resolution of civil lawsuits
1. The
Court shall issue a decision to suspend the resolution of a civil lawsuit in
one of the following cases:
a) The
involved parties being individuals have died or being agencies or organizations
have been merged, divided, separated or dissolved without any agencies,
organizations or individuals inheriting their procedural rights and
obligations;
b) One
involved party being an individual has lost his/her civil act capacity or being
a minor while his/her representative at law has not been determined yet;
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d) The
results of resolution of another related case or matter, which, as required by
law, must be settled by other agencies or organizations before the cases are
resolved, need to be waited for;
dd) The
results of the request for judicial assistance, entrustment of evidence
collection or materials or evidences sent from agencies/organizations at the
request of the Court need to be waited for;
e) The
results of the processing of legislative documents, which, related to the case
resolution denote violations against a Constitution, Law or Resolution of
National Assembly, Ordinance or Resolution of the Standing committee of the
National, legislative documents of superior regulatory agencies to which the
Court have sent written recommendations for consideration for amendment,
supplement or annulment, need to be waited for;
g) The
case is mentioned in Article 41 of the Law on Bankruptcy;
h) Other
circumstances prescribed by law.
2. Within
03 working days from the day on which the decisions to suspend the resolution
of civil lawsuits are issued, the Courts must send such decisions to the
involved parties, the agencies/organizations/individuals initiating lawsuits
and the procuracies of the same level.
Article 215. Consequences of the suspension of resolution
of civil lawsuits
1. The
Court must not delete the names of suspended civil lawsuits from the case
acceptance books but only note down the number and date of the decisions to
suspend the resolution of such civil lawsuits in the case acceptance books.
2. The
Court fee advances and Court fees paid by the involved parties shall be
deposited at the State Treasury and handled when the Courts proceed with the
resolution of the civil lawsuits.
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Within 01
month from the day on which the written recommendations from the Courts are
received, competent agencies must make a written response. After such period,
if the competent agencies fail to issue the response, the Courts shall continue
the case resolution according to the common procedures.
4. During
the suspension period of the case resolution, the Judges assigned to resolve
the cases must be still responsible for the case resolution.
When the
decisions on suspension of the case resolution prescribed in clause 1 Article
214 of this Code have been issued, the Judges assigned to resolve the cases
shall supervise and expedite agencies, organizations and individuals to as soon
as possible eliminate the problems leading to such suspension to promptly
settle the cases.
5.
Decisions to suspend the resolution of the civil lawsuits may be appealed
against under appellate procedures.
Article 216. Decisions on resuming the resolution of civil
lawsuits
Within 03
working days from the day on which the reasons to suspend the resolution of
civil lawsuits prescribed in Article 214 of this Code are resolved, the Courts
must issue decisions to resume the case resolution and send such decisions to
the involved parties, the agencies/organizations/individuals initiating
lawsuits and the procuracies of the same level.
Decisions
on suspension of civil lawsuit’s resolution shall expire since the decisions on
resuming of civil lawsuit’s resolution are issued. The Courts shall resume
resolving the cases since the decisions on resuming of civil lawsuit’s
resolution are issued.
Article 217. Termination of the resolution of civil
lawsuits
1. After
accepting cases which fall within their respective jurisdiction, the Courts
shall issue decisions to terminate the resolution of the civil lawsuits in the
following circumstances:
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b)
Agencies or organizations have been dissolved or are bankrupt without any
agencies, organizations or individuals inheriting their procedural rights and
obligations;
c) The
litigators withdraw all petitions for initiation of lawsuits or the plaintiffs are absent though
having been duly summoned twice, unless they apply for trials in their absence or
a force majeure event or an objective obstacle occurs;
d) The
Courts have issued decisions to open bankruptcy procedures for enterprises or
cooperatives being a party to the cases and the resolution of such cases is
related to the obligations and property of such enterprises or cooperatives;
dd)
plaintiffs fail to advance the charges for property price appraisal and other
procedural charges prescribed in the Code.
If the
defendants with counter-claims or persons with relevant interests and duties
with independent claims fail to advance the property price appraisal and other
procedural charges as prescribed in this Code, the Courts shall terminate the
resolution of counter-claims or the independent claims of the persons with
relevant interests and duties;
e) The
involved parties have requested to apply the statute of limitations before the
first-instance Courts issue the judgments/decisions on case resolution and the
statute of limitations for lawsuit initiation expire;
g) Cases
prescribed in clause 1 Article 192 of this Code that have been accepted by the
Courts;
h) Other
circumstances prescribed by law.
2. If the
plaintiffs withdraw all petitions for lawsuit initiation or are absent without good and
sufficient reasons or do not apply for trials in their absence though have been duly summoned twice and
there are defendants applying for counter-claims and/or persons with relevant
interests and duties applying for independent claims, the cases shall be
resolved as follows:
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b) If the
defendants do not withdraw or withdraw only a part of the counter-claims, the
Courts shall issue decisions to terminate the resolution of the petitions for
lawsuits of plaintiffs; then the defendants shall become the plaintiffs and
vice versa;
c) If the
defendants withdraw all the counter-claims, persons with relevant interests and
duties do not withdraw or withdraw only a part of the independent claims, the
Courts shall issue decisions to terminate the resolution of the petitions for
lawsuits of plaintiffs and/or counter-claims of defendants; then the persons
with relevant interests and duties shall become the plaintiffs, persons who are
sued according to independent claims shall become the defendants;
3. The
Courts shall make decisions to terminate the resolution of civil lawsuits and
cross out the civil cases in the acceptance books and return the petitions and
accompanied materials and evidences to involved parties on request; in such
cases, the Courts must make and retain copies of such petitions, documents and
evidences to serve as basis for resolution of appeals and recommendations on
request.
Within 03
working days from the day on which decisions to terminate the resolution of
civil lawsuits are issued, the Courts shall send such decisions to involved
parties, agencies, organizations and individuals initiating the lawsuits and
procuracies of the same levels.
4.
Regarding cases that are re-settled according to first-instance procedures,
immediately when decisions to conduct cassation or reopening trials have been
issued, if the Courts decide to terminate the resolution of the cases, the
Courts shall also resolve the consequences of the enforcement of judgments and
other relevant matters (if any); if the plaintiffs withdraw the petitions or
are absent though have been duly summoned twice, the termination of the
resolution of the cases must be agreed by the defendants and persons with
relevant interests and duties.
Article 218. Consequences of the termination of resolution
of civil lawsuits
1. When
the decisions to terminate the resolution of civil lawsuits are issued, the
involved parties shall not be entitled to initiate lawsuits to request the
Courts to re-settle such civil lawsuits if the institution of the subsequent
cases does not bring in any difference from the previous cases in terms of the
plaintiff, defendant and the disputed legal relations, except for cases
prescribed in clause 3 Article 192, point c clause 1 Article 217 of this Code
and cases otherwise provided for by law.
2. In
cases where the Courts issue decisions to terminate the resolution of civil
lawsuits as provided for in points a and b Clause 1, Article 217 of this Code
or because the plaintiffs are absent though have been duly summoned twice as
prescribed in point c clause 1 Article 217 of this Code, the Court fee advance
money paid by the involved parties shall be confiscated by the State for public
fund.
3. In
cases where the Court issue decisions to terminate the resolution of civil
lawsuits because the litigators withdraw all petitions for lawsuit initiation
as provided for in point c and other cases specified in points d, dd, e and g
clause 1 Article 217 of this Code, the Court fee advance money paid by the
involved parties shall be refunded to the payers.
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Article 219. Competence to issue decisions to suspend,
resume or terminate the resolution of civil lawsuits
1. Before
the opening of the trial, the Judges who are assigned to resolve the civil
lawsuits shall be competent to issue decisions to suspend/resume/terminate the
resolution of such civil lawsuits.
2. In the
Court session, the trial panels shall be competent to issue decisions to
terminate/resume/terminate the resolution of the civil lawsuits.
Article 220. Decisions to bring cases to trial
1. A
decision to bring a case to trial shall contain the following principal
details:
a) Date
of issue of the decision;
b) Name
of the Court issuing that decision;
c) The
case to be brought to trial;
d) Name
and address of the plaintiff, defendant or agency/organization/individuals
initiating the lawsuit prescribed in Article 187 of this Code and persons with
relevant interests and duties;
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e) Full
name of the procurator who takes part in the Court session, full name of
alternate procurator (if any);
g) Time,
date and venue of the Court session;
h) Public
trial or closed trial;
i) Full
names of persons who are summoned to the Court session.
2.
Decisions to bring the cases to trial must be sent to the involved parties and
the procuracies of the same level immediately within 03 working days from the
day on which they are issued.
Where the
procuracies participate in Court sessions as provided for in Clause 2, Article
21 of this Code, the Courts must send the case files and the decisions to bring
a case to trial to the procuracies of the same level. Within 15 days from the
day on which the documents are received, the procuracies must study then return
the files to the courts.
Article 221. Discovery and recommendation for amendment,
supplement or annulment of legislative documents
1. During
the course of civil lawsuit’s resolution, if a legislative document related to
the resolution of a civil lawsuit denotes contrariness against a Constitution,
law or resolution of National Assembly, ordinance, resolution of Standing
committee of National Assembly or a legislative document of a superior
regulatory agency, the Court shall handle as follows:
a) If not
any decisions to bring the case to trial is issued, the Judge assigned to
resolve the case shall make a report and request the Chief Justice of the Court
being in charge of the case to issue a writing requesting the Chief Justice of
the Supreme People’s Court to recommend a competent agency to consider
amending, supplementing or annulling a legislative document;
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2. Within
15 days from the day on which the written request by the Chief Justice of the
inferior Court is received, the Chief Justice of the Supreme People’s Court
shall consider and handle as follows:
a) If the
request is well-grounded, a written recommendation shall be issued and sent to
the competent agency requesting for amendment, supplement or annulment of the
legislative document and a notification shall be sent to the requesting Court
so that it issues a decision to suspend the case resolution;
b) If the
request is groundless, a written response shall be sent to the requesting Court
so that it continues the case resolution according to law provisions.
3.
Agencies receiving recommendation of the Court about the amendment, supplement
or annulment of legislative documents shall handle as follows:
a)
Regarding legislative documents detailing and/or guiding Constitutions, laws or
resolutions of National Assembly or ordinances or resolutions of Standing Committee of National
Assembly or legislative documents of superior regulatory agencies, within 01
month from the day on which the recommendation made by the Chief Justice of the
Supreme People’s Court is received, the agency issuing such documents must
consider and send written response to the Supreme People’s Court. When such
time limit expires, if not any written response is received, the Court shall
resolve the case pursuant to the documents with higher-level effect;
b)
Regarding legislative documents being laws or resolutions of National Assembly
or ordiances or resolutions of Standing committees of National Assembly, the
provisions of the Law on promulgation of legislative documents shall be
applied.
Chapter XIV
FIRST-INSTANCE COURT SESSION
Section 1. GENERAL REGULATIONS ON FIRST-INSTANCE Court
SESSIONS
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The
first-instance Court sessions must be conducted on the right times and at the
right places written in the decisions to bring the cases to trial or in the
notices on resuming the Court sessions in cases where the Court sessions have
been postponed.
Article 223. Place of Court session
Court
sessions must be held at the offices of the Court or outside the Court,
provided that the seriousness is ensured and the arrangement of the courtrooms
shall conformed to regulations in Article 224 of this Code.
Article 224. Arrangement of courtrooms
1. The
national emblem of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam shall be put up in the
middle of the top of the wall behind the Trial Panel.
2. The
courtroom must have areas exclusively reserved for the Trial Panel, Procurator,
Court clerk, involved parties, defense counsels of lawful rights and interests
of involved parties, other procedure participants and Court participants in the
Court sessions.
Article 225. Direct and oral trial
1. The
Courts must directly ascertain details and facts of the cases by listening to
the presentations of the plaintiffs, the defendants, persons with related
interests and duties, lawful representatives, defense counsels of the
legitimate rights and interests of the involved parties and other participants
in the procedures and agencies and organizations invited to the Court session;
questioning and listening to the answers; examining and verifying collected
documents and evidences; directing and listening to the debates among the
involved parties; listening to the opinions of the procuracy presented by
procurators .
2. The
trial must be oral trial and must be conducted in courtrooms.
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1. Where
Judges or People’s Jurors cannot continue to participate in the trial, the
trial may be continued if there are alternate Judges or People’s Jurors present
at the Court sessions from the beginning.
In cases
where a Trial Panel consists of two Judges and the presiding Judge cannot
continue to participate in the trial, the other Judge being member of the Trial
Panel shall act as the presiding Judge of the Court session and the alternate
Judge shall be added to be member of the Trial Panel.
2. In
cases where there is no alternate Judge or People’s Juror to replace a member
of the Trial Panel, or where the presiding Judge of the Court session must be
replaced while there is no Judge for replacement as provided for in Clause 1 of
this Article, the case shall be retried from the beginning.
Article 227. Presence of involved parties, their
representatives and defense counsels of legitimate rights and interests
1. For
the first time duly summoned by the Court, involved parties or their
representatives and defense counsels of their legitimate rights and interests
must be present at the Court session; if any of them is absent, the trial panel
shall postpone the Court session, unless such person requests for trial in
his/her absence.
The
Courts must notify the involved parties, their representatives and defense
counsels of legitimate rights and interests of the postponement of the Court
session.
2. For
the second time duly summoned by the Court, involved parties or their
representatives and defense counsels of their legitimate rights and interests
must be present at the Court session, unless they request for trials in their
absence; if any of them is absent due to a force majeure event or an objective
obstacle, the Court may postpone the Court session, otherwise the Court shall
handle as follows:
a) If the
plaintiff is absent and his/her representative does not participate in the
Court session, such plaintiff shall be considered giving up the lawsuit
initiation, thus the Court shall issue a decision to terminate the case
resolution for his/her request for lawsuit initiation, unless such plaintiff
requests for trials in their absence. The plaintiff may re-initiate lawsuits
according to law provisions;
b) If the
defendant without counter-claims or a person with relevant interests and duties
without independent claims is absent and his/her representative does not
participate in the Court session neither, then the Court shall direct the trial
according to absence-trial procedure;
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a) If the
person with relevant interests and duties has independent claims but is absent
and his/her representative does not participate in the Court session, such
person shall be considered giving up the independent claims, thus the Court
shall issue a decision to terminate the resolution for his/her independent
claims, unless such person requests for trial in his/her absence. Such person
may re-initiate lawsuits for his/her independent claims according to law
provisions;
dd) If
the defense counsels of legitimate rights and interests of the involved parties
are absent, the Court shall direct the trial according to absence-trial
procedures.
Article 228. Trial in absence of involved parties and/or
defense counsels of their rights and interests from Court sessions
The
Courts shall proceed with the case adjudication in the following circumstances:
1. The
plaintiff, the defendant or the persons with related interests and duties and
their representatives are absent from Court sessions but such
plaintiff/defendant/person with related interests and duties files an
application to request the Courts to conduct the trial in their absence;
2. The
plaintiff, the defendant or the persons with related interests and obligations,
who are absent from Court sessions, have their lawful representatives to attend
the Court sessions;
3. The
cases prescribed in points b, c, d and dd clause 2 Article 227 of this Code.
Article 229. Presence of witnesses
1.
Witnesses shall be obliged to attend Court sessions under Court subpoenas.
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The Trial
Panels shall keep adjudicating the cases if the witnesses are absent but have
earlier given their testimonies in person or sent their testimonies to courts.
The presiding Judges shall make such testimonies public.
The Trial
Panels shall decide to postpone the Court sessions if the absence of the
witnesses at Court creates difficulties or affects the objective and
comprehensive resolution of the cases.
3. If the
witnesses are absent from the Court sessions without good and sufficient
reasons and such absence obstructs the adjudication, they can be escorted to
the Court sessions under the decision of the trial panels, unless the witnesses
are minors.
Article 230. Presence of expert-witnesses
1.
Expert-witnesses shall be obliged to attend Court sessions under Court subpoena
to explain and answer issues relating to the expertise and expertising
conclusions.
2. Where
the expert-witnesses are absent, the Trial Panels shall decide to keep
adjudicating the cases or postpone the Court sessions.
Article 231. Presence of interpreters
1.
Interpreters shall be obliged to attend the Court sessions under Court
subpoena.
2. Where
the interpreters are absent without substitutes, the Trial Panels shall decide
to postpone the Court sessions.
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1. The
procurators assigned by the heads of the procuracies of the same level shall
have the duty to attend the Court sessions. If the procurators are absent, the
trial panels shall keep adjudicating and the Court sessions shall not be
postponed.
2. Where
the procurators are replaced in Court sessions or cannot continue to
participate in the trial sessions and the alternate procurators are available,
the latter may attend the Court sessions for continued trial over the cases if
they are present at the Court session from the beginning.
Article 233. Time limit for postponing a Court session and
decision to postpone a Court session
1. The
trial panels shall issue decisions to postpone a Court session in cases
specified in clause 2 Article 56, clause 2 Article 62, clause 2 Article 84,
Article 227, clause 2 Article 229, clause 2 Article 230, clause 2 Article 231
and Article 241 of this Code. Time limit for postponing a Court session shall
not exceed 01 month or not exceed 15 days, applicable to Court carried out
under simplified procedure, from the day on which the decision to postpone the
Court session is issued.
2. A
decision to postpone a Court session must contain the following principal
details:
a) Date
of issue of the decision;
b) Name
of the Court and full names of presiding officers;
c) The
case to be brought to trial;
d)
Reasons for the postponement of the Court session;
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3. The
decisions to postpone the Court sessions must be signed by the Judges presiding
over the Court sessions on behalf of the trial panels and be publicly notified
at the Court session. For absent persons, the Courts shall immediately send the
decisions to them and concurrently to the procuracies of the same level.
4. In
cases where the Courts cannot resume the Court sessions on the right time and
at the right places inscribed in the decisions to postpone the Courts sessions,
the Courts must immediately notify the procuracies of the same level and
procedure participants of the time and venues for re-opening the Court
sessions.
Article 234. Internal rules of Court sessions
1. When
entering the courtroom, everyone shall conform to the security testing of the
forces responsible for protecting the Court session.
2. Arms,
murder weapons, explosives, flammable substances, poisons, radioactive
substances, objects banned from circulation, leaflets, banners and other
documents and objects affecting the seriousness of the Court sessions are
prohibited from bringing into the Court sessions, except for exhibits serving
the resolution of the cases or arms and tools that competent persons used for
protecting the Court session.
3.
Participants in a Court session at the request of the Court must present their
subpoenas, invitations and other relevant papers to the Court reporter at
clerk's desk at least 15 minutes before the opening time of the Court session
and must take seats in the courtroom according to the guidance of the Court
reporter; people who are late must present the required papers to the Court
reporter via the security forces of the Court session.
4.
Journalists attending a Court session to collect and communicate information
about the happening of the Court session must comply with the direction of the
presiding Judge of the Court session about press gallery. Journalists shall
record audio or video of the trial panel only when allowed by the presiding
Judge of the Court session. The recording of audio and video of involved
parties or other participants in the procedure must be agreed by them.
5. Any
one attending the Court sessions must wear serious costume and must respect the
trial panel, keep silent and must comply with the direction of the presiding
Judge.
6.
Persons attending the Court sessions must not wear hats and color glasses in
the courtrooms, unless they have plausible reasons and are permitted by the
presiding Judge to do so; use of cell phones, smoking, eating, drinking and
other acts affecting the solemnity of the Court sessions are not allowed in the
courtrooms.
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People
who are under 16 must not get into courtrooms, unless they are summoned by the
Courts to attend the Court session.
8. All
people in courtrooms must stand up when the Trial panel members enter the
courtroom and when the judgments are pronounced, except for special cases where
they are permitted to stay seated by the presiding Judges.
9. Only
persons who are permitted by the Trial panel may raise or answer questions or
express opinions. Persons must stand up while questioning, answering or
expressing opinions, unless they are permitted by the presiding Judges to stay
seated due to health conditions.
Article 235. Procedures for rendering Court judgments or
decisions in Court sessions
1.
Judgments must be discussed and adopted by the Trial Panels in the deliberation
rooms.
2.
Decisions to replace the procedure presiding officers, expert-witnesses,
interpreters, to transfer the cases, to suspend or terminate the resolution of
cases, or to postpone Court sessions, or decisions to recognize the agreement
between involved parties or to suspend the Court session, must be discussed and
adopted by the trial panel at the deliberation rooms and made in writing.
3.
Decisions on other matters shall be discussed and adopted by the Trial Panels
at the Court rooms and need not to be made in writing but must be recorded in
the minutes of the Court sessions.
Article 236. Minutes of Court sessions
1.
Minutes of a Court session must be fully inscribed with the following details:
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b) All
developments at the Court session from the beginning to the end;
c)
Questions, answers and statements given at the Court session.
2. Apart
from recording the minutes of Court sessions, the Trial Panels may make
audio-recording and/or video-recording of the developments of the Court
session.
3. At the
end of a Court session, the presiding Judge of the Court session must examine
the minutes and co-sign on the minutes with the Court reporter.
4. The
procurator and procedure participants shall be entitled to read the minutes of
the Court session immediately after the end of the Court session and request
the inclusion of amendments or additions into the minutes and append the
countersign.
Article 237. Preparing for the opening of a Court session
Before
the opening of a Court session, the Court reporter must perform the following
jobs:
1.
Briefing on the internal rules of the Court session.
2.
Checking up on the absence or presence of the persons participating in the
Court sessions under the court's subpoenas or notices; if any person is absent,
the reasons therefor must be clarified.
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4.
Requesting all people present in the Court room to stand up when the Trial
Panel enters the Court room.
Article 238. Procedures for conducting trial in absence of
all procedure participants
1. The
Courts shall base themselves on materials and evidences included in the case
files to conduct trials in the absence of involved parties and/or other
procedure participants according to law provisions when the following
conditions are fully satisfied:
a) The
plaintiffs and/or their lawful representatives submit applications for trials
in their absence;
b) The
defendant, persons with relevant interests and duties and/or their lawful
representatives submit applications for trials in their absence or are absent
though have been duly summoned twice;
c)
Defense counsels of legitimate rights and interests of plaintiffs, defendants
or persons with relevant interests and duties submit applications for trials in
their absence or are absent though have been duly summoned twice.
2. The
presiding Judges of the Court session shall announce reasons for the absence of
the involved parties or their applications for trials in their absence.
3. The
presiding Judges of the Court session shall briefly announce the contents of
the cases and materials and evidences included in the case files. The trial
panel shall discuss matters to be settled in the cases.
4.
Procurators shall present opinions of the procuracies.
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Section 2. PROCEDURES FOR COMMENCING A Court SESSION
Article 239. Opening a Court session
1. The
presiding Judge of the Court session shall open the Court session and read out
the decision to bring the case to trial.
2. The
Court reporter shall then report to the Trial Panel on the presence and absence
of the persons participating in the Court session under the court's subpoenas
or notices and the reasons for their absence.
3. The
presiding Judge of the Court shall cross-check the presence of the participants
in the Court session under the court's subpoenas or notices and examine
identities of the involved parties and procedure participants.
4. The
presiding Judge shall explain the rights and obligations of the involved
parties and other procedure participants.
5. The
presiding Judge shall introduce full names of the procedure presiding officers,
expert-witnesses, interpreters.
6. The
presiding Judge of the Court shall ask persons who are entitled to request the
replacement of procedure presiding officers, expert-witnesses or interpreters
to see if they wish to replace anyone.
7. The
witnesses shall be requested to undertake to give truthful testimonies, if not,
they will take legal responsibility, unless the witnesses are minors.
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Article 240. Handling requests for replacement of procedure
conductors, expert-witnesses and/or interpreters
In cases
where certain persons request the replacement of procedure presiding officers,
expert-witnesses and/or interpreters, the trial panels must consider and decide
in accordance with procedures stipulated in this Code and may accept or not
accept such request. In case of non-acceptance, the reasons therefor must be
clearly stated.
Article 241. Considering and deciding on the postponement
of Court sessions upon someone's absence
When any
procedure participants are absent from Court sessions and they do not fall into
the cases where the Courts must postpone the Court sessions, the presiding
Judges must ask if there is any one requesting the postponement of the Court
sessions. If there is, the Trial Panels shall consider and decide thereon
according to the procedures stipulated in this Code and may accept or not
accept such request. In case of non-acceptance, the reasons therefor must be
clearly stated.
Article 242. Securing the objectivity of witnesses
1. Before
asking the witnesses about matters they know, which are related to the
resolution of the cases, the presiding Judges may decide to take necessary
measures so that witnesses cannot hear each other's testimonies nor contact the
relevant persons.
2. If the
testimonies of the involved parties and the witnesses are interrelated, the
presiding Judges may decide to isolate the involved parties from the witnesses
before the witnesses are questioned.
Article 243. Inquiring the involved parties about change,
supplementation or withdrawal of their claims
Procedures
for inquiring the involved parties about change, supplementation or withdrawal
of their claims start when the presiding Judges ask the involved parties about
the following matters:
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2.
Inquiring the defendants to see whether or not they wish to change, supplement
or withdraw part or whole of their counter-claims;
3.
Inquiring the persons with related interests and duties who make independent
claims to see whether or not they wish to change, supplement or withdraw part
or whole of their independent claims.
Article 244. Considering the change, supplementation or
withdrawal of claims
1. The
trial panels shall accept the change and/or supplementation of the involved
parties' claims, if such change or supplementation does not fall beyond the
scope of their original lawsuit petitions, counter-claims or independent
claims.
2. Where
an involved party voluntarily withdraws part or whole of his/her claim, the
Trial Panel may accept such request and terminate the trial regarding the
withdrawn part or whole of the claim.
Article 245. Changing the procedural status
1. Where
the plaintiff withdraws the entire lawsuit claim, but the defendant still
maintains his/her counterclaims, the defendant shall become the plaintiff and
the plaintiff shall become the dependant.
2. Where
the plaintiff withdraws the entire lawsuit claim and the defendant withdraws
the entire counterclaims, but persons with related interests and duties still
maintain their independent claims, the persons with related interests and
duties shall become plaintiffs while the persons who are sued under the
independent claims shall become defendants.
Article 246. Recognizing the agreements of involved parties
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2. The
Court decisions recognizing the involved parties' agreements on the resolution
of the cases shall take legal effect as prescribed in Article 213 of this Code.
Section 3. ORAL ARGUMENT IN Court SESSIONS
Article 257. Contents and mode of oral argument in Court
sessions
1. Oral
argument at the Courts include the presentation of evidences, questioning and
answering and the expression of opinions and argument about evidences and
details of the civil lawsuits or disputes and the applicable law provisions for
the resolution of petitions of involved parties in the cases.
2. The
oral argument at the Courts shall be conducted according to the direction of
the Presiding Judge of the Court session.
3. The
Presiding Judge must not limit the duration of the oral argument and must
enable persons who participate in the argument to present fully their opinions;
however, the Presiding Judge shall be entitled to request such persons to stop
presenting contents irrelevant to the cases.
Article 248. Presentation of defense counsels of legitimate
rights and interests of the involved parties
1. In
cases where certain involved parties still maintain their claims and cannot
reach agreements on the resolution of the cases, the involved parties shall
present in the following order:
a) The
defense counsels of the plaintiff's legitimate rights and interests shall
present the plaintiff's claims and evidences to prove that their claims are
well-grounded and lawful. The plaintiff shall be entitled to give additional
opinions.
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b) The
defense counsels of the defendant's legitimate rights and interests shall
present the defendant's opinions on the plaintiff's claims; the defendant's
counter-claims and proposals as well as evidences to prove that such proposals
are well grounded and lawful. The defendant shall be entitled to give
additional opinions.
c) The
defense counsels of the legitimate rights and interests of persons with related
rights and obligations shall present the latter's opinions on the claims and proposals
of the plaintiff and the defendant; independent claims and proposals of the
persons with related rights and obligations as well as evidences to prove that
such proposals are well grounded and lawful.
The
persons with related interests and duties shall be entitled to give additional
opinions.
2. In
cases where the plaintiff, the defendant or the persons with related interests
and duties have no defense counsels of their legitimate rights and interests,
they shall present by themselves their claims and proposals as well as
evidences to prove that such claims and proposals are well grounded and lawful.
3. At the
Court sessions, the involved parties and defense counsels of their legitimate
rights and interest are entitled to supplement evidences as prescribed in
clause 4 Article 96 of this Code to prove their respective claims and
proposals.
Article 249. Order and principle of inquiring in Court
session
1. When
the presentations of the involved parties finish and the defense counsels of
rights and interests of the involved parties, according to provisions of
Article 248 of this Code and under the direction of the Presiding Judge of the
Court session, the order of inquiring in Court session shall be:
a) The
plaintiffs, defense counsels of rights and interests of the plaintiffs; the
defendants, defense counsels of rights and interests of the defendants; persons
with relevant interests and duties, defense counsels of rights and interests of
persons with relevant interests and duties;
b) Other
procedure participants;
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d)
Procurators participating in the Court session.
2.
Questions for the inquiry must be clear, serious, unduplicated and the
questioners must not misuse the inquiry to infringe upon honor and dignity of
procedure participants.
Article 250. Inquiring plaintiffs
1. In
cases where there are more than one plaintiff, they shall be inquired and
separately one by one.
2. The
plaintiffs shall be inquired only about matters presented by themselves or by
the defense counsels of their legitimate rights and interests which are
unclear, inconsistent or contradictory to their previous testimonies, or
contradictory to the presentations of the defendant, the persons with related
rights and obligations and/or the defense counsels of their legitimate rights
and interests.
3.
Plaintiffs may themselves reply or the defense counsels of their legitimate
rights and interests may rely on their behalf, then the plaintiffs may give
additional answers.
Article 251. Inquiring defendants
1. In
cases where there is more than one defendant, each defendant shall be inquired
separately.2. The defendants shall only be inquired about matters which have
been unclearly presented by themselves or the defense counsels of their
legitimate rights and interests or have been inconsistent or contradictory to
their previous testimonies, or contradictory to the claims of the plaintiffs or
the persons with related rights and obligations and/or the defense counsels of
their legitimate right and interests.
3.
Defendants may answer questions by themselves or the defense counsels of their
legitimate rights and interests answer on their behalf before the defendants
give additional answers.
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1. In
cases where there are more than one person with related interests and
obligations, each of them shall be inquired separately.
2. The
persons with related interests and obligations shall only be inquired about
matters which have been unclearly presented by themselves or the defense
counsels of their legitimate rights and interests or have been inconsistent or
contradictory to their previous testimonies, or contradictory to the claims of
the plaintiffs or the persons with related rights and obligations and/or the
defense counsels of their legitimate right and interests.
3.
Persons with related rights and obligations may answer questions by themselves
or the defense counsels of their legitimate rights and interests answer on
their behalf before they give additional answers.
Article 253. Inquiring witnesses
1. Before
questioning witnesses, the presiding Judges shall ask clearly about the
relations between them and parties involved in the cases; if witnesses are
minors, the presiding Judges may request their parents, guardians or teachers
to help in the inquiries. In cases where there is more than one witness, each
of them shall be inquired separately.
2. The
presiding Judges shall request the witnesses to present details about the cases
that they know. After the witnesses complete their presentations, they may only
be further questioned about points which they have presented unclearly,
incompletely or inconsistently or which have been contradictory to their previous
testimonies, contradictory to the presentations of the involved parties and/or
the defense counsels of the involved parties' legitimate rights and interests.
3. After
completing their presentations, the witnesses shall stay in the Court rooms so
that they may be further questioned.
4. In
cases where it is necessary to secure the safety of the witnesses or their
relatives, the Trial Panels may decide not to disclose information on their
personal records and must keep them from being seen by attendants to the Court
sessions.
5.
involved parties and defense counsels of their legitimate rights and interests
may question the witnesses after agreed by the presiding Judges of the Court
session.
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1. The
Trial Panel shall publicly disclose materials and evidences of a case in the
following cases:
a)
Procedure participants are absent from Court sessions but have given their
testimonies during adjudication preparation;
b)
Testimonies given in Court sessions by procedure participants are contradictory
to their previous testimonies;
c) In
other cases that the trial panel considers necessary or at the request of
procurators, involved parties, defense counsels of rights and interests of
involved parties, other procedure participants.
2. In
special cases where it is necessary to keep State secrets, to preserve the
nation's fine customs and practices, to keep professional secrets, business
secrets, private secrets or family secrets or to protect minor people at the
requests of the involved parties, the trial panels shall not disclose documents
included in the case files.
Article 255. Listening to audio-tapes and/or discs,
watching video tapes and/or discs and other audio/video-recording devices
At the
request of the involved parties, defense counsels of their legitimate rights
and interests, procedure participants or procurators or when deeming it
necessary, the Trail Panels may arrange for the audio tapes and/or discs to be
listened to, and/or video tapes and/or discs and/or other audio/video recording
devices to be screened in Court sessions, except for the cases stipulated in
Clause 2 of Article 254 of this Code.
Article 256. Examining exhibits
Exhibits,
photos or records certifying exhibits shall be presented for examination in
Court sessions.
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Article 257. Inquiring expert-witnesses
1. The
presiding Judges shall request the expert-witnesses to present their
conclusions on matters they have been assigned to expertise. During their
presentations, the expert-witnesses may give additional explanations on the
expertising conclusions and the grounds to make such conclusions.
2.
Procurators and procedure participants present in Court sessions shall be
entitled to give comments on the expertising conclusions, to ask about matters
which are unclear or contradictory in the expertising conclusions or
contradictory to other details of the cases.
3. In
cases where the expert-witnesses are absent from Court sessions, the presiding
Judges shall publicly disclose the expertising conclusions.
4. When
any involved parties or defense counsels of rights and interests of involved
parties disagrees with the expertising conclusions publicly disclosed in Court
sessions and request the expert-witnesses to make additional expertise or
re-expertise, if deeming that the additional expertise or the re-expertise is
necessary for the settlement of the cases, the Trial Panels shall decide on the
additional expertise or re-expertise; in this case, the Trial Panels shall
decide to postpone the Court sessions according to provisions in point d clause
1 Article 259 of this Code.
Article 258. Concluding the inquiries in Court sessions
When
deeming that the case details have been fully examined, the presiding Judges
shall ask the procurators, the involved parties, the defense counsels of the
legitimate rights and interests of the involved parties and other procedure
participants whether they request to ask about any matters or not; in cases
where someone has such request and he/she deems that such request is well
grounded, the presiding Judges shall decide to continue the inquiries.
Article 259. Postponement of Court sessions
1. During
the process of adjudication, the trial panel shall be entitled to make
decisions to postpone the Court session in any of the following cases:
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b) Due to
health conditions or due to a force majeure event or an objective obstacle, the
procedure participant cannot continue participating in the Court session,
unless the presiding officer apply for trial in their absence;
c) Cases
where materials and/or evidences must be verified or additional collected to
resolve the cases and such activities could not be
carried out at the court;
d) Cases
where the additional expertising results or the re-expertising results have not
been made and must be waited for;
dd)
Involved parties agree to request the Court to postpone the Court session so
that they will conduct mediation themselves;
e) Cases
which must be reported to the Chief Justice of the Courts to apply for
amendment and/or supplement or repeal of legislative documents as prescribed in
Article 221 of this Code.
2. The
postponement of the Court sessions must be recorded in minutes. Duration of the
postponement of the Court sessions must not exceed 01 month from the day on
which the trial panels make decisions to postpone the Court sessions. When such
time expires, if the reasons for the postponement do not exist anymore, the
trial panels shall resume the Court sessions; otherwise, the trial panels shall
make decisions to suspend the resolution of the lawsuits. The trial panels must
send written notification to procedure participants and the procuracies of the
same levels about the time for resuming the Court sessions.
Article 260. Order for making arguments
1. At the
end of the inquiring process, the Trial Panels shall move on to the arguments
in Court sessions. The order for making arguments shall be as follows:
a) The
defense counsels of the plaintiffs' legitimate rights and interests shall make
their presentations. The plaintiff shall be entitled to give additional
opinions. In cases where agencies or organizations initiate lawsuits, the
representatives of such agencies or organizations shall present their opinions.
The persons having their rights and interests protected may give additional
comments;
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c)
Defense counsels of the legitimate rights and interests of persons with related
interests and duties shall make presentations. The persons with related
interests and duties shall be entitled to give additional opinions;
d)
Involved shall present their arguments and counter-arguments according to the
control of the presiding Judges;
dd) When
it is deemed necessary, the trial panels may request involved parties to make
additional argument about specific matters that are used as grounds for the
resolution of the cases.
2. In
cases where the plaintiffs, the defendants or persons with related interests
and duties have no one to defend their legitimate rights and interests, they
shall themselves make presentations during the arguments.
3. If any
of the involved parties or other participants is absent, the presiding Judges
of the Court sessions shall publicly disclose his/her testimonies so that
involved parties present at the courtroom could make arguments and responses.
Article 261. Presentations during arguments and responses
When
making presentations on the assessment of evidences or expressing their views
on the resolution of cases, persons participating in the arguments must base
themselves on documents and evidences that have been collected, examined and
verified in Court sessions as well as results of the inquiring process in Court
sessions. They may respond to the opinions of others.
Article 262. Presentations of procurators
When
procedure participants have present their arguments and responses, the
procurators shall give opinions about the compliance of the Judges, trial
panels, Court reporters and other procedure participants with procedure law
during the course of resolution of the cases, from the acceptance to the
deliberation and about the case resolution.
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Article 263. Resuming inquiries and arguments
Through
arguments, if deeming that details of the cases have not been considered, or
have been considered insufficiently, or it is necessary to additionally examine
evidences, the trial panels shall decide to resume the inquiring process.
Section 4. DELIBERATION AND PRONOUNCEMENT OF JUDGMENTS
Article 264. Deliberation
1. At the
end of arguments, the trial panels enter the deliberation rooms to deliberate
the cases.
2. Only
members of the trial panels are allowed to participate in the deliberation.
During the deliberation, the trial panel members must base themselves on
materials and evidences examined at the Court sessions, the results of
arguments at the Court sessions and law provisions; if the cases are of cases
specified in clause 2 Article 4 of this Code, the trial members must also base
themselves on customs The People’s Jurors shall vote first while the presiding
Judges shall vote last. The minority may express their opinions in writing
which shall be recorded in the case files.
3.
Deliberation must be recorded in minutes specifying all opinions discussed and
decisions of the trial panels. The deliberation records must be signed at the
deliberation rooms by all members of the trail panels before the judgments are
pronounced.
4. Where
the cases involve many complicated circumstances and the deliberation requires
a longer time, the trial panels may decide on the deliberation time limit
which, however, shall not exceed 05 working days since the end of arguments in
Court sessions.
The trial
panels must inform all persons present in Court sessions and the absent
procedure participants of the hours, date and place where the judgments shall
be pronounced If the trial panels have made the notification while some
proceeding participants are absent, the trial panels shall still proceed with
the pronouncement of judgments as provided for in Article 267 of this Code.
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Through
deliberation, if deeming that details of the cases have not been considered,
the inquiries have not been sufficient or evidences should be further examined,
the trial panels may decide to resume the inquiries and arguments.
Article 266. First-instance judgments
1. Courts
shall render judgments in the name of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam.
2. A
judgment shall contain an introduction, contents of the case and assessment of
the court, and the court's decision. To be specific:
a) The
introduction section of the judgment must clearly state the name of the
first-instance court; the serial number and date of the case acceptance; the
serial number of the judgment and the date of judgment pronouncement; full
names of the members of the trial panel, the Court reporter, the procurators,
expert-witnesses and interpreter; full names and addresses of the plaintiff,
defendant, persons with related interests and duties; agencies, organizations
or individuals initiating the lawsuit; the lawful representatives, the defense
counsels of the legitimate rights and interests of the involved parties;
matters under dispute; the serial number and date of the decision to bring the
case to trial; form of trial: public trial or closed trial; time and place of
trial;
b) The
contents of the cases and assessment of the Court must contain the lawsuit
petition of the plaintiff, lawsuit petition of agency/organization/individual;
counter-claims and/or requests of the defendant; independent claims and/or
requests of persons with related interests and duties.
The Court
must base themselves on materials and evidences examined at the Court session
and result of argument at the Court session to analyze and assess
comprehensively and objectively details of the case and legal bases; if the
case is of those specified in clause 2 Article 4 of this Code, the customs, the
provisions applicable to same matters, basic principles of civil laws, legal
precedents or the justice shall be based on when deciding to or to not approve
the petitions/requests of the involved parties or representatives of their
legitimate rights and interests and resolving relevant matters.
c) The
court’s decision must state legal grounds, decisions of the trial panel on each
matter to be resolved in the case, on the application of provisional emergency
measures, Court fees, procedural charges and right to appeal against the
judgment; in cases where there are decisions which must be executed
immediately, such decisions must be clearly stated.
3. When
retrying cases of which judgments or decisions have been partial or wholly
cancelled according to cassation/reopening decisions, the Court shall resolve
all issues pertaining to properties and/or duties that have been executed (if
any) according to legally effective judgments and decisions that are cancelled;
such shall be recorded in the judgment.
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The Trial
panels shall pronounce the judgments in the presence of involved parties,
representatives of agencies/organizations/individuals initiating lawsuits. If
the involved parties are present during the Court session but are absent at the
time of pronouncing judgments or in cases specified in clause 4 Article 264 of
this Code, the judgment shall be still pronounced by the trial panels.
Upon the
pronouncement of a judgment, all people in the courtroom must rise up, except
for special cases permitted by the presiding Judge. The presiding Judge or
another member of the trial panel reads out the judgment and may give further
explanation of the judgment execution and the right to appeal.
If Court
conducts the trial behind closed doors as prescribed in clause 2 Article 15 of
this Code, the trial panel shall publicly pronounce only the beginning and the
decisions in the judgment.
If the
involved parties need interpreters, the interpreters shall interpret the parts
of judgment that are publicly pronounced.
Article 268. Amendment or supplementation of judgments
1. A
judgment, once pronounced must not be amended or supplemented, except where
obvious mistakes in spelling, in data due to confusion or miscalculation are
detected.
2. If the
judgment needs to be amended or supplemented as prescribed in clause 1 of this
Article, the Judge shall cooperate with People’s Jurors being members of the
trial panel making such judgment to issue a decision on amendment and/or
supplement of the judgment and immediately send it to the involved parties,
agencies/organizations/individuals initiating the lawsuit, procuracy of the
same level and civil judgment-executing bodies if the judgment has been sent to
such civil judgment-executing bodies.
In cases
where the Judge in charge of the case no longer hold the Judge's position at
the Court making such judgment, the courts' Chief Justices shall carry out such
amendment or supplementation.
Article 269. Supplying judgment extracts and judgments
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2. Within
10 days as from the date of judgment pronouncement, the Court shall hand over
or send the judgment to the involved parties, agencies, organizations or
individuals initiating the lawsuit and the procuracy of the same level.
3. An
effective first-instance judgment of the Court about resolution of civil
lawsuit pertaining to interests of consumers initiated by a social organization
protecting interests of consumers must be publicly posted at the office of the
Court and must be publicly posted on one of central or local dailies for three
consecutive issues.
An
effective first-instance judgment of the Court relevant to the compensation
responsibility of the State must be sent to State management agencies competent
in state compensation by the Court.
An
effective first-instance judgment of the Court relevant to the change of civil
status of an individual must be notified by the Court in writing enclosed with
judgment extracts to People’s Committee where such individual registered for
civil status as prescribed in the Law on civil status.
Time
limit for public disclosure, posting or delivery of judgments and notices
prescribed in this clause is 05 working days from the day on which the judgment
takes legal effect.
4.
Effective first-instance judgments of the Court shall be posted on e-portal of
the Court (if any), except for court’s judgments/decisions containing
information specified in clause 2 Article 109 of this Code.
PART THREE
PROCEDURES FOR RESOLUTION OF CASES AT
APPELLATE COURTS
Chapter XV
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Article 270. Nature of appellate trial
Appellate
trial means the re-trial by the appellate Court of a case with the
first-instance court's judgment or decision having not yet taken legal effect
and being appealed against.
Article 271. Persons having the right to appeal
The
involved parties or their representatives, agencies, organizations or
individuals initiating lawsuits shall have the right to lodge their appeals
against judgments or decisions of the first-instance Courts to suspend or
terminate the resolution of lawsuits in order to request the appellate Courts
to conduct re-trials according to the appellate procedures.
Article 272. Application for an appeal
1. When
exercising his/her right to appeal, the appellant shall formulate an
application for appeal. An application for an appeal must have the following
principal contents:
a) Date
on which the application is made;
b) Name,
address; phone number, fax number, e-mail address (if any) of the appellant;
c) The
section of judgment or decision of the first-instance Court which has not yet
taken legal effect and is appealed;
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dd)
Signature or fingerprint of the appellant.
2. Any
appellant being individual who has fully civil procedure act capacity may
formulate application for appeal himself/herself. Regarding the blanks for name
and address of the appellant on the application form, full name, address, phone
number, fax number, e-mail address (if any) of the appellant must be written.
At the end of the application form, the appellant must append his/her signature
or fingerprint.
3. For
appellant specified in clause 2 of this Article, if the appellant cannot apply
for appeal himself/herself, he/she may authorize a representative to conduct
the application for appeal. Regarding the blanks for name and address of the
appellant on the application form, full name and address of the proxy
representative of the appellant; phone number, fax number, e-mail address (if
any) of the appellant must be written and the written authorization for conduct
application for appeal must be enclosed therewith. At the end of the
application form, the proxy representative of appellant must append his/her
signature or fingerprint.
4. Lawful
representatives of involved parties being agencies or organizations may make
appeal themselves. Regarding the blanks for name and address of the appellant
on the application form, names, addresses, phone numbers, fax numbers, e-mail
addresses (if any) of the involved parties being agencies, organizations and
full names and positions of the lawful representatives of the involved parties
being must be written. At the end of the application form, the lawful
representatives must append signature and affix seal of such
agencies/organizations; if the appellant is an enterprise, the seal shall be
used according to provisions of the Law on Enterprise.
If the
lawful representatives of involved parties being agencies/organizations
authorize other persons to conduct appeal, at the blanks for name and address
of the appellant on the application form, full names and addresses of the
lawful representatives of such agencies/organizations; phone numbers, fax
numbers, e-mail addresses (if any) of the agencies/organizations; full names,
positions of lawful representatives of such agencies/organizations must be
written and written authorizations must be enclosed therewith. At the end of
the application form, the proxy representative of appellant must append his/her
signature or fingerprint.
5. The
lawful representatives of the involved parties being minors or legally
incapacitated persons may formulate application for appeal by themselves. At
the blanks for name and address of the appellant on the form, full names and
addresses of the lawful representatives; full names and addresses of involved
parties being minors or legally incapacitated persons must be written. At the
end of the application form, the proxy representatives of appellant must append
their signatures or fingerprints.
If the
lawful representatives of involved parties authorize other persons to conduct
appeal, at the blanks for name and address of the appellant on the application
form, full names and addresses of the authorized representatives; full names
and addresses of the lawful representatives of the involved parties; full names
and addresses of involved parties being minors or legally incapacitated persons
must be written and the written authorization must be enclosed therewith. At
the end of the application form, the proxy representatives of appellant must
append their signatures or fingerprints.
6. The
authorization specified in clauses 3, 4 and 5 of this Article must be carried
out under written authorizations that are lawfully notarized and authenticated,
except for cases where such authorizations are formulated under the witness of
the Judges or persons assigned by the Chief Justices. The written
authorizations must contain the contents of the judgments/decisions on
suspension/termination of the cases issued by the first-instance Courts that
the involved parties authorized the proxy representatives to file appeals against.
7. The
appeal application must be filed with the first-instance Court which rendered
the first-instance-judgment or decision being appealed against. Where the
appeal application is filed with the appellate Court, the appellate Court must
transfer the application to the first-instance Court for carrying out necessary
procedures and sending the case file to the appellate Court as provided for in
this Code.
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Article 273. Time limit for an appeal
1. The
time limit for an appeal against the first-instance court's judgment is 15 days
as from the date of judgment pronouncement; for the involved parties or representatives
of agencies/organizations/individuals initiating lawsuits being absent from the
Court sessions or absent when the Court pronounces the judgment with good and
sufficient reason, the time limit for an appeal shall be counted from the date
the judgment is handed to them or publicly posted up.
For cases
where involved parties, representatives of agencies/organizations/individuals
initiating lawsuits are present in Court sessions but absent when the Court
pronounces the judgment without good and sufficient reason, time limit for an
appeal shall be counted from the date of judgment pronouncement.
2. The
time limit for an appeal against the first-instance court's decision on to
suspend or terminate the resolution of the case is 07 days counting from the
day on which the involved parties and the agencies, organizations and
individuals initiating lawsuits receive the decision or from the day on which
the decision is posted up as prescribed in this Code.
3. For
cases where the appeal applications are sent by post, time limit for an appeal
shall be determined pursuant to the date written on the post seal of the
sending post office. If the appellant is incurring a detainment, the date of
appeal shall be the day on which the appeal application is certified by the
prison officers.
Article 274. Examination of appeal applications
1. After
receiving the appeal applications, the first-instance Courts must examine their
validity as provided for in Article 272 of this Code.
2. In
case of overdue appeals, the first-instance Courts shall request the appellants
to further explain the reasons therefor and provide materials and/or evidences
(if any) to prove that the reasons for late submission of their appeal
applications are plausible.
3. Where
the appeal applications are made not in compliance with the provisions of
Article 272 of this Code, the first-instance Courts shall request the
appellants to amend or supplement them.
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a) The
appellant is not entitled to file an appeal;
b) The
appellant fails to make another appeal application or fails to amend or
supplement the appeal application at the request of the Court as prescribed in
clause 3 of this Article.
c) Cases
specified in clause 2 Article 276 of this Code.
Article 275. Overdue appeals and consideration for overdue
appeals
1.
Appeals that are not made within the time limit stipulated in Article 273 of
this Code shall be the overdue appeals. After receiving overdue appeal
applications, the first-instance Courts must forward the applications and the
appellants' explanation of the reasons for late filing the appeals, materials
and/or evidences (if any) to the appellate Courts.
2. Within
10 days after receiving the overdue appeal applications and the accompanied
materials and/or evidences, the Courts of appeal shall set up a Panel
consisting of three Judges to consider the overdue appeals. The meetings for
considering overdue appeals must be under the presence of representatives of
the procuracies of the same level and the overdue appeal applicants. If the
appellants and/or the procurators are absent, the meetings shall be still
carried on by the Court.
3.
Pursuant to materials and evidences related to the overdue appeals, opinions of
the overdue appeal applicants and representatives of the procuracies at the
meetings, the overdue-appeal-considering Panel shall issue decisions under the
majority rule on the acceptance or refusal of the overdue appeals that contain
explanation for such acceptance or refusal. The appellate Courts must send
their decisions to the overdue appeal applications, the first-instance Courts
and the procuracies of the same level. If the appellate Courts accept the
overdue appeals, the first-instance Courts shall carry out procedures
stipulated in this Code.
Article 276. Notification of payment of appellate Court fee
advance
1. After
accepting the valid appeal applications the first-instance Courts must notify the
appellants thereof so that they pay the appellate Court fee advances as
required by law, if they do not fall cases of being exempt from, or having not
to pay, the appellate Court fee advances.
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If the
appellants pay submit the Court the receipts of the payment of Court fee
advances after 10 days as from the day on which the courts' notifications of
payment of the appellate Court fee advances are received without explanation,
the first-instance Courts shall request the appellant to send a writing
presenting reasons for the lateness of submission of such receipts to the
first-instance Courts within 03 working days from the day on which the courts’
notifications are received to be recorded in the case files. Such cases shall
be settled according to the overdue appeal consideration procedures.
Article 277. Notice of appeal
1. After
receiving the valid appeal applications, the first-instance Courts must notify
such in writing to the procuracies of the same level and the involved parties,
enclosed with copies of the appeal applications and additional materials and
evidences that the appellants enclosed with the appeal applications.
2.
Involved parties relevant to the appeal who are notified of the appeals shall
be entitled to send to the appellate Courts documents expressing their opinions
on the appealed matters. Such documents shall be included in the case files.
Article 278.
Appeal by procuracies
The head
of the procuracy of the same level or the immediate superior level shall be
entitled to appeal against the first-instance court's judgments or decisions
to suspend or terminate the resolution of the cases in order to request the
immediate superior Court to directly settle the cases according to the
appellate procedures.
Article 279.
Appeal decisions of procuracies
1. The
procuracies' appeal decisions must be made in writing and contain the following
principal contents:
a)
Issuing date and serial number of the appeal decision;
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c)
Appealed sections of parts or the whole first-instance court's judgments or
decisions which have not yet taken legal effect;
d)
Reason(s) for such appeal and the procuracy's claims.
dd) Full
name of the person signing the appeal decision and seal of the procuracy
issuing the appeal decision.
2. The
appeal decisions must be immediately sent to the first-instance Courts that
have rendered the appealed judgments or decisions so that such Courts shall
carry out procedures stipulated by this Code and send the case files to the
appellate Courts as provided for in Article 283 of this Code.
3.
Enclosed with the appeal decisions shall be additional documents and/or
evidences (if any) to prove that the procuracies' appeals are well grounded and
lawful.
Article 280. Time limit for an appeal
1. The
time limit for making an appeal against a first-instance court's judgment shall
be 15 days for the procuracy of the same level and 1 month for the immediate
superior procuracy, counting from the date of judgment pronouncement. In cases
where the procurators do not attend the Court sessions, the appeal time limit shall
be counted from the day on which the procuracy of the same level receives the
judgment.
2. The
time limit for making an appeal against the first-instance court's decision on
suspension or termination of the resolution of the case shall be 07 days for
procuracy of the same level and 10 days for immediate superior procuracy,
counting from the day on which the procuracy of the same level receives such
decision.
3. If the
Court receives the appeal decision from the procuracy after the time limit
prescribed in clauses 1 and 2 of this Article, the first-instance Court shall
request the procuracy to provide explanation in writing.
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1. The
procuracy issuing an appeal decision must promptly send the appeal decision to
the parties relating to the appeal.
2.
Persons who are notified of the appeal shall be entitled to send to the
appellate Court documents expressing their views on the appealed matters. Such
documents shall be included in the case files.
Article 282. Effects of an appeal
1.
First-instance courts’ judgments/decisions or parts thereof that are appealed
against shall not be enforced, except where the law requires the immediate
enforcement thereof.
2. The
first-instance courts' judgments/decisions or parts thereof which are not
appealed against shall take legal effect as from the day on which the appeal
time limit expires.
Article 283.
Forwarding case files and appeals
The
first-instance Courts must forward case files, appeals and accompanying
materials and evidences to the appellate Courts within 05 working days from the
date:
1. The
time limit for an appeal expires;
2. The
appeal time limit expires and the appellant has submitted the receipt of the
payment of appellate Court fee advance to the first-instance court.
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1. If the
time limit for appeal specified in Article 273 of this Code has not expired,
the appellant is entitled to modify or supplement the appeal regardless of the
scope of the original appeal.
If the
time limit for appeal specified in Article 280 of this Code has not expired,
the procuracy shall be entitled to modify or supplement the appeal regardless
of the scope of the original appeal.
2. Before
the opening of appellate Court sessions or in appellate Court sessions, the
appellants may modify or supplement their appeals and the procuracies issuing
appeal decisions may modify or supplement their appeals, provided that the
modification or supplementation must not go beyond the scope of the original
appeals or appeals, if the appeal or appeal time limit has expired.
3. Before
the opening of appellate Court sessions or in appellate Court sessions, the
appellants may withdraw their appeals and the procuracies issuing appeal
decisions or the immediate superior procuracy may withdraw their appeals.
The
appellate Courts shall terminate the appellate trial over parts of the cases
against which the appellants have withdrawn their appeals or the procuracies
have withdrawn their appeals.
The
termination of the appellate trials before the opening of the appellate Court
sessions shall be decided by the presiding Judges of the Court sessions; the
termination of the appellate trials in the Court sessions shall be decided by
the trial panels.
4. The
modification, supplementation or withdrawal of appeals before the opening of
appellate Court sessions must be made in writing and sent to the appellate
courts. The appellate Courts must notify involved parties of the modification,
supplement or withdrawal of appeals and notify the procuracies of the same
level of the modification, supplement or withdrawal of the appeals.
The
modification, supplementation or withdrawal of appeals in Court sessions must
be recorded in the minutes of the Court sessions.
Chapter XVI
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Article 285. Acceptance of appellate trial
1.
Immediately after receiving the case files, appeals and accompanying materials
and evidences, the appellate Courts must record them to the acceptance books.
Within 03
working days from the date of judgment acceptance, the Court shall send written
notifications to involved parties, agencies, organizations and individuals
initiating lawsuits and procuracy of the same level informing that it has
accepted the petition; such information shall be also posted on e-portal of the
Court (if any).
2. The
Chief Justice of the appellate Court shall set up an appellate trial panel and
assign a Judge to be the presiding Judge of the Court session.
Article 286. Time limit for preparation for appellate
trials
1. Within
02 months as from the day on which the petition is accepted, the competent
Court shall, on a case-by-case basis, issue one of the following decisions:
a) To
suspend the appellate trial over the cases;
b) To
terminate the appellate trial over the cases;
c) To
bring a case to appellate trial.
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2. Within
01 month form the day on which the decision to bring a case to trial is issued,
the Court shall open an appellate Court session; if there is good and
sufficient reason, such period shall be 02 months.
3. If
there is a decision to suspend the appellate trial over the case, time limit
for preparation for the appellate trial shall be calculated from the day on
which the decision to resume the lawsuit settlement issued by the Court takes
legal effect.
4. Time
limit prescribed in this Article shall not be applicable to cases that are
appealed according to simplified procedures and cases involving foreign
elements.
Article 287. Provision of materials and evidences during
the preparation for appellate trial
1.
Involved parties are entitled to supplement the following materials and
evidences during the preparation for appellate trial:
a)
Materials and evidences requested by the first-instance Court that have not
been provided by the involved parties due to good and sufficient reason;
b)
Materials and evidences not requested by the first-instance Court or
2.
Procedures for supplying materials and/or evidences shall be conformable with
provisions of Article 96 of this Code.
Article 288. Suspension of the appellate trial
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2. A
decision to suspend the appellate trial over a case shall be effective
immediately and shall be immediately sent to involved parties,
agencies/organizations/individuals initiating the lawsuit and the procuracy of
the same level.
Article 289. Termination of the appellate trial
1. The
appellate Court shall issue a decision to suspend the appellate trial over a
case or a part of a case in the following cases:
a) Cases
specified in points a and b clause 1 Article 217 of this Code;
b) The
appellant withdraw the whole appeal or the procuracy withdraw the whole appeal;
c) The
appellant withdraw a part of the appeal or the procuracy withdraw a part of the
appeal;
d) Other
cases as prescribed by law.
2. If the
appellant withdraws the whole appeal or the procuracy withdraws the whole
appeal before the appellate Court issues the decision to bring a case to
appellate trial, the decision to terminate the appellate trial shall be issued
by the Judge assigned to preside the Court session; if the appellant withdraws
the whole appeal or the procuracy withdraws the whole appeal when the Court has
issued the decision to bring a case to appellate trial, the decision to
terminate the appellate trial shall be issued by the appellate trial panel.
In such
cases, first-instance judgments/decisions shall take legal effect from the day
on which the appellate Courts issue the decisions to terminate the appellate
trial.
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4. A
decision to terminate the appellate trial over a case shall be effective
immediately and shall be immediately sent to involved parties, agencies/organizations/individuals
initiating the lawsuit and the procuracy of the same level.
Article 290. Decision to bring a case to appellate trial
1. A
decision to bring a case to appellate trial shall consist of the following
principal contents:
a) Information
specified in points a, b, c, d, g, h and I clause 1 Article 220 of this Code;
b) Full
name of the Judge, Court clerk; full name of alternate Judge (if any);
c) Full
name, procedural capacity of the appellant;
d)
Procuracy lodging appeal (if any);
dd) Full
name of the procurator participating in the Court session; full name of the
alternate procurator (if any).
2. A
decision to bring a case to appellate trial must be sent to involved parties
and procuracy of the same level within 03 working days from the day on which it
is issued.
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Within
the preparation for appellate trials, appellate Courts shall be entitled to
issue decisions to apply, change or cancel provisional emergency measures
prescribed in Chapter VIII of this Code.
Article 292. Forwarding the case files to the procuracies
for study
1.
Appellate Courts must forward the case files and decisions to bring the case to
trial to procuracies of the same levels for study.
2. The
procuracies shall study the files within 15 days as from the day on which such
case files are received; upon the expiry of such time limit, the procuracies
must return the case files to the Courts.
Chapter XVII
APPELLATE TRIAL PROCEDURES
Section 1. PROCEDURES FOR OPENING AN APPELLATE COURT
SESSION
Article 293. Scope of appellate trial
The
appellate Courts shall only review the parts of the first-instance
judgments/decisions, which are appealed against or related to the review of the
appealed contents.
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1. The
appellants, the involved parties, agencies/organizations/individuals that are
related to the resolution of the appeals and the defense counsels of the
involved parties' legitimate rights and interests must be summoned to the
appellate Court sessions. The Courts can summon other procedure participants to
Court sessions if they deem it necessary for the resolution of the appeals.
2.
Procurators of the procuracy of the same level shall participate in the
appellate Court session.
Article 295. Suspension or termination of appellate trials
in Court sessions
At
appellate Court sessions, the suspension or termination of the appellate trail
of cases shall comply with the provisions of Articles 288 and 289 of this Code.
Article 296. Postponement of appellate Court sessions
1. If the
procurators assigned to participate in the appellate Court sessions are absent,
the trial panels shall not postpone the Court sessions and shall carry on the
trial, unless the procuracy lodge appeals.
2. If
people who file appeals, people who do not file appeals but have interests and
duties related to the appeals or defense counsels of their legitimate rights
and interests are absent at the first time they are duly summoned, the Court
sessions must be postponed. If they apply for trial in their absence,
the Judge shall carry out the appellate Court sessions according to procedures for trial in their absence.
3. If the
appellants who have been duly summoned twice but are still absent, they shall
be considered having waived their appeals and the Courts shall issue decisions
to stop the appellate trial over the appeals of such appellants; if such
appellants apply for trials in their absence, the Court shall carry out the appellate
Court sessions in their absence.
If the
appellants are absent due to force majeure events or objective obstacles, the
Court sessions must be postponed.
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If people
who do not file appeals but have interests and duties related to the appeals
and other participants who have been duly summoned twice by the Courts but
still absent, the Court shall carry on the trial.
4. The
duration for postponement of, and the decisions to postpone, the appellate
Court sessions shall comply with the provisions of Article 233 of this Code.
Article 297. Preparation for the opening of appellate Court
sessions and procedures for starting the appellate Court sessions
The
preparation for the opening of appellate Court sessions and the procedures for
starting the appellate Court sessions shall comply with the provisions of
Articles 237, 239, 240, 241 and 242 of this Code.
Article 298. Asking about the appeals and processing of
change of appeals in Court sessions
1. After
the conclusion of the procedures for opening an appellate Court session, a
member of the trial panel shall announce the contents of the case, the decision
of the first-instance judgment and the appealed contents.
2. The
presiding Judge shall ask the following issues:
a)
Whether or not the plaintiff wishes to withdraw his/her/its lawsuit petition or
not;
b)
Whether or not the appellant or the procurator wishes to change, supplement or
withdraw their appeal;
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3. If the
appellant withdraws a part of the appeal or the procuracy withdraws a part of
the appeal, Court shall accept such withdrawal. If the appellant or the
procuracy supplement contents that exceed the original scope of appeal, the
Court shall not consider such contents.
Article 299. Plaintiffs withdraw lawsuit petitions before
the opening of, or in, appellate Court sessions
1. If the
plaintiffs withdraw their lawsuit petitions before the opening of, or in,
appellate Court sessions, the appellate Trial Panels must ask the defendants
whether they agree therewith or not and may settle on a case-by-case basis as
follows:
a)
Disapproving the withdrawal of lawsuit petitions by the plaintiffs if the
defendants disagree;
b)
Approving the withdrawal of lawsuit petitions by the plaintiffs if the
defendants agree. The Appellate Trial Panels shall issue decisions to abrogate
first-instance judgments and terminate the resolution of the cases. In this
case, the involved parties are still required to pay the first-instance Court
fees as decided by the first-instance Courts and half of the appellate Court
fees as provided for by law.
2. In
cases where the Appellate Trial Panels issue decisions to terminate the
resolution of the cases as prescribed in point b clause 1 of this Article, the
plaintiffs shall be entitled to re-institute the cases according to the
procedures prescribed by this Code.
Article 300. Recognizing the agreement of the involved
parties in appellate Court sessions
1. In
appellate Court sessions, if the involved parties can reach mutual agreement on
the resolution of their cases and their agreements are voluntary and not
contrary to law or social ethics, the appellate trial panels shall render
appellate judgments to revise the first-instance Court judgments and recognize
the agreement of the involved parties.
2. The
involved parties may also reach agreement on the payment of the first-instance
Court fees. If they fail to reach such agreement, the Courts shall make
decision according to law provisions.
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Section 301. Contents and forms of oral argument in
appellate Court sessions
Contents
and forms of oral argument in appellate Court sessions shall comply with
regulations in Article 247 of this Code.
Article 302. Presentations of the involved parties and
procurators in appellate Court sessions
If the
involved parties maintain the appeals and the procuracies maintain the appeals,
the presentations in appellate Court sessions shall be performed as follows:
1.
Presentation of appeals:
a)
Defense counsels of legitimate rights and interests of the appellant shall make
presentation of the contents of appeals and grounds for the appeals. The
appellants may give additional opinions.
In cases
where all involved parties appeal, the presentations shall be made in the
following order: the defense counsels of legitimate rights and interests of the
appellants being plaintiffs and the plaintiffs; the defense counsels of
legitimate rights and interests of the appellants being defendants and the
defendants; the defense counsels of the legitimate rights and interests of the
appellants being persons with related interests and duties and the persons with
related interests and duties;
b) In
case where only the procuracies file
appeals, the procuracies shall make
presentation of the appealed contents. In cases where there are both appeal, the
involved parties shall present the appealed contents and the grounds therefore
first, then the procurators shall present the appealed contents and the
grounds therefor;
c) In
cases where the involved parties have no defense counsels, they shall
themselves present their opinions on the appealed contents as well as their
proposals.
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3. In the
appellate Court sessions, the involved parties and procurators may product
additional evidences.
Article 303.
Procedures for inquiries and publication of materials and evidences examination
of exhibits in appellate Court sessions
1.
Procedures for inquiring participants and publishing materials and evidences,
examining exhibits prescribed in Article 287 of this Code in appellate Court
sessions shall be the same as those applicable in first-instance Court
sessions.
2. The
inquiry shall be made on matters falling within the scope of appellate trials
as stipulated in Article 293 of this Code.
Article 304. Postponement of appellate Court sessions
The
postponement of appellate Court sessions shall comply with regulations in
Article 259 of this Code.
Article 305. Arguments in appellate Court sessions
1. In
appellate Court sessions, involved parties and defense counsels of legitimate
rights and interests of involved parties shall argue only about matters falling
within the scope of appellate trials that have been inquired in appellate Court
sessions.
2.
Appellate arguments shall be conducted according to the following order:
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b)
Defense counsels of legitimate rights and interests of the involved parties
shall present arguments, question and answer. The involved parties may give
additional opinions;
c) When
it is deemed necessary, the trial panel may request involved parties to present
additional arguments about specific matters to form basis for the resolution of
the case.
3. Appeal arguments
shall be conducted according to the following order:
a)
Defense counsels of legitimate rights and interests of the involved parties
shall present about the lawfulness and the groundedness of the appeal. The
involved parties may give additional opinions;
b)
Procurators shall present opinions about matters presented by defense counsels
of legitimate rights and interests of involved parties and/or involved parties.
4. If the
involved parties have no defense counsels of legitimate rights and interests,
they shall argue themselves.
5. If any
of the involved parties or other participants is absent, the presiding Judge of
the Court session must publish their testimonies, base on which the involved
parties present in the Court session can argue and question and answer.
Article 306. Presentations of the procurators in appellate
Court sessions
When the
arguments and questioning and answering finish, the procurators shall present
opinions of the procuracies on the compliance with law provisions during the
resolution of civil lawsuits in appellate trial period.
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Article 307. Deliberation and judgment pronouncement
The
deliberation, the inquiry resumption and arguments, the time for deliberation,
pronouncement, amendment and supplementation of appellate judgments shall
comply with the first-instance trial procedures.
Article 308. Jurisdiction of the appellate trial panels
The
appellate trial panels shall have the power as follows:
1. To
uphold the first-instance judgments;
2. To
revise the first-instance judgments;
3. To
repeal the whole or parts of first-instance judgments and transfer the case
files to the first-instance Courts for retrial over the cases according to
first-instance procedures;
4. To
repeal the first-instance judgments and terminate the resolution of the cases;
5. To
terminate the appellate trial;
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Article 309. Amendment to first-instance judgments
The
appellate trial panels can revise part or whole of a first-instance judgment if
the first-instance Court made a decision in contravention of law in the
following cases:
1. The
collection of evidences and proof has been carried out sufficiently and in
accordance with the provisions of Chapter VII of this Code;
2. The
collection of evidences and proof that have not been carried out sufficiently
in first-instance Courts are completely supplemented in appellate Court
sessions.
Article 310. Repeal of the whole or parts of first-instance
judgments and transfer of the case files to the first-instance Courts for
retrial over the cases according to first-instance procedures
The
appellate trial panels shall repeal the whole or parts of first-instance
judgments and transfer the case files to the first-instance Courts for retrial
over the cases according to first-instance procedures in any of the following
cases:
1. The
collection of evidences and proof have failed to comply with the provisions of
Chapter VII of this Code or have not yet been fully carried out while the
supplementation thereof cannot be made in the appellate Court sessions;
2. The
composition of the first-instance Trial Panels has fail to comply with the
provisions of this Code or other serious procedural violations have been
committed and affect lawful rights and interests of the involved parties.
Article 311. Annulment of first-instance judgments and
termination of case resolution
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Article 312. Termination of the appellate trial
The
appellate trial panels shall terminate the appellate trial and uphold the
first-instance judgment in any of the following cases:
1. Cases
specified in clause 2 Article 289 of this Code;
2. The
appellant is absent though has been duly summoned twice as prescribed in clause
3 Article 296 of this Code, unless the case is appealed against by another
appellant by the procuracy.
Article 313. Appellate Court judgments
1. The
appellate trial panels shall, in the name of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam,
render appellate Court judgments.
2. An
appellate Court judgment shall be composed of:
a) The
introduction;
b) The case
contents, appeal, assessment;
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3. The
introduction section must clearly state the name of the appellate court; the
code number and date of the case acceptance; the serial number of the judgment
and the date of judgment pronouncement; full names of the members of the trial
panel, Court reporter, procurator, expert-witness and interpreter; full names
and addresses of the plaintiffs, defendants, persons with related rights and
obligations; agencies or organizations initiating the lawsuit or their lawful
representatives, the defense counsels of their legitimate rights and interests;
appellants or appealing procuracy; public or closed trial, time and place of
trial.
4. The
section on the case contents, the appeal and assessment must summarize the
contents of the case and decision of the first-instance court; content of the
appeal.
The Court
must base themselves on materials and evidences examined at the Court session
and result of argument at the Court session to analyze and assess comprehensively
and objectively the appeal, details of the case, the adjudication and
resolution of the first-instance court, legal grounds applied by the Court, if
the case is of the cases specified in clause 2 Article 4 of this Code, the
Court shall also base themselves on customs, legal similarity, basic principles
of civil law, precedent or the justice to decide to accept or not to accept the
appeal and to resolve relevant matters.
The
decision must state legal grounds, decisions of the trial panel on each matters
to be resolved in the case, on the application of provisional emergency
measures, first-instance court’s fees, appellate court’s fees and procedural
charges (if any).
5. When
retrying cases whose judgments or decisions have been partial or wholly repealed
according to cassation/reopening decisions, the Court shall resolve all issues
pertaining to properties and/or duties that have been executed (if any)
according to legally effective judgments and decisions that are repealed; such
shall be recorded in the judgment.
6. The
appellate judgments shall take effect as from the date they are pronounced.
Article 314. Procedures for appellate revision of decisions
of the first-instance Courts which are appealed against
1. When
conducting appellate trial over first-instance courts' decisions, which are
appealed against, the appellate trial panels shall not be required to open
Court sessions nor summon the involved parties, except where it is necessary to
hear their opinions before making decisions.
2. Within
01 month form the day on which the appeal against a decision of a
first-instance Court is accepted, the Court shall open an appellate meeting to
review such decision; if there is good and sufficient reason, such period shall
be 02 months. Procurators of the procuracy of the same level shall participate
in the appellate meeting. If the procurators are absent, the meetings shall be
still carried on by the Court, unless the procuracy lodges an appeal.
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4. The
procurators shall state the procuracies' opinions on the resolution of the
appeals before the appellate trial panels make decisions.
5. When
reviewing the first-instance courts' decisions, which are appealed against, the
appellate trial panels shall have the power to:
a) Uphold
the first-instance courts' decisions;
b) Amend
the first-instance courts' decisions;
c) Repeal
the first-instance courts' decisions and transfer the case files to the
first-instance Courts to continue the resolution of the cases.
6. The
appellate decisions shall take effect as from the day on which they are issued.
Article 315. Forwarding appellate judgments/decisions
1. Within
15 days as from the day on which the appellate judgments or decisions are
issued, the appellate Courts must forward the judgments and/or decisions to the
Courts which conducted the first-instance trials, the procuracies of the same
levels, the competent civil judgment-executing bodies, the appellants, persons
whose rights and obligations are related to the appeals or their lawful
representatives.
If the
appellate trial is conducted by a Collegial People’s Court, such time limit may
be extended for not exceeding 25 days.
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An
appellate judgment/decision relevant to the compensation responsibility of the
State must be sent to State management agencies competent in state compensation
by the appellate Court.
Regarding
appellate judgments/decisions related to the change of civil statuses of
individuals, within 05 working days from the day on which such
judgments/decisions take legal effect, the appellate Courts shall send written
notifications enclosed with copies of the judgments/decisions to People’s
Committees where such individuals registered civil statuses as prescribed in
the Law on civil status.
3. The
appellate judgments shall be posted on e-portal of the Court (if any), except
for court’s judgments containing information specified in clause 2 Article 109
of this Code.
PART FOUR
RESOLUTION OF CIVIL LAWSUITS ACCORDING TO
SIMPLIFIED PROCEDURES
Chapter XVIII
RESOLUTION OF CIVIL LAWSUITS ACCORDING TO
SIMPLIFIED PROCEDURES AT FIRST-INSTANCE TRIALS
Article 316. Scope of application of simplified procedures
1.
Simplified procedures are procedures that are applied to resolve civil lawsuits
which fully satisfy conditions specified in this Code in simpler procedures
than common civil lawsuit resolution procedures to resolve the cases quickly
but still ensure the compliance with law.
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3. If
there are other law provisions stating that a civil dispute shall be resolved
according to simplified procedure, the resolution of such dispute shall be
conducted according to procedures specified in this Part.
Article 317. Conditions for application of simplified
procedures
1. The
Court shall resolve a case according to simplified procedure when all of the
following conditions are satisfied:
a) The
case has simple details, clear legal relationship and the involved parties have
admitted their obligations; materials and evidences are sufficient, ensuring
the sufficiency of grounds for the resolution of the case and the Court does
not have to collect materials/evidences;
b)
Addresses of residence and headquarters of all of involved parties are
determined;
c) None
of involved parties reside overseas and there are no properties being in
dispute are in foreign countries, unless the involved parties residing overseas
and the ones residing in Vietnam have reached agreements to request the Courts
to resolve the cases according to simplified procedures or the involved parties
have presented evidences about the legitimate right to ownership towards the
properties and have reached agreements about the handling of the properties.
2.
Regarding labor cases that have been accepted and settled according to
simplified procedures, if the employers having foreign nationalities or their
lawful representatives have left their residence/headquarter addresses that
have been priorly declared without notification to other involved parties and
the Courts, such entities shall be considered to conceal their addressees on purpose.
The Courts shall continue resolving the cases according to simplified procedure
specified in this Part.
3. During
the preparation for the resolution of the cases according to simplified
procedures, if any of the following details is detected and, as the result, the
cases no longer eligible for resolution according to simplified procedures, the
Courts shall make decisions to resolve the cases according to common
procedures:
a) New
details are found out but the involved parties cannot reach agreements and
therefore such details need verification, more materials and evidences need to
be collected and expertises need to be conducted;
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c) Cases
where provisional emergency measures must be applied;
d) New
persons with relevant interests and duties are found out;
dd) New
counter-claims or independent claims are found out;
e) New
involved parties who reside overseas, properties in dispute that are in foreign
countries, requirements for verification or collection of evidences from
foreign countries subject to request for judicial assistance, except for cases
specified in point c clause 1 of this Article.
4. If the
cases are transferred for resolution according to common procedures, the
duration for preparation for the resolution of the cases shall be re-counted
from the day on which the decisions to transfer the cases for resolution
according to common procedures are issued.
Article 318. Decisions to bring cases to trial for
resolution according to simplified procedures
1. Within
01 month from the day on which the cases are accepted according to regulations
in clauses 3 and 4 Article 195 of this Code, the Judge who are assigned to
resolve the case must make decisions to bring the cases to trial for resolution
according to simplified procedures and shall hold the trials within 10 days
from the day on which the decisions are issued.
2. A
decision to bring a case to trial for resolution according to simplified
procedures shall include the following main contents:
a) Date
of issuing the decision;
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c) The
case that is brought to trial for resolution according to simplified procedure;
d) Names,
addresses; phone numbers, fax numbers, e-mail addresses (if any) of the
plaintiffs, the defendants or agencies, organizations or individuals initiating
lawsuits specified in Article 187 of this Code and persons with relevant interests
and duties;
dd) Full
names of the Judge, the Court clerk; full name of the alternate Judge (if any);
e) Full
name of the procurator; full name of the alternate procurator (if any);
g) Date,
time and place of holding the Court session;
h)
Whether the session is open trial or closed trial;
i) Full
names of persons summoned to the Court session.
3. The
decisions to bring the case to trial for resolution according to simplified
procedures shall be immediately sent to involved parties and procuracies of the
same levels.
If the
procuracies participate in the Court sessions according to regulations in
clause 2 Article 21 of this Code, the Courts shall send the case files and the
decisions to bring the cases to trial to procuracies of the same levels. Within
03 working days from the day on which the case files are received, the
procuracies shall study the files and return them to the Courts.
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1. Within
03 working days from the day on which the decisions to bring the cases to trial
for resolution according to simplified procedures are received, involved
parties may file complaints and the procuracies of the same levels may file
recommendations to the Chief Justices of the Courts issuing such decisions.
2. Within
03 working days from the day on which the complaints/recommendations about the
decisions to bring the cases to trial for resolution according to simplified procedures
are received, the Courts shall issue one of the following decisions:
a) To
uphold the decision to bring the case to trial for resolution according to
simplified procedures;
b) To
repeal the decision to bring the case to trial for resolution according to
simplified procedure and transfer the case for resolution according to common
procedures.
3. The
decisions on resolution of complaints/recommendations issued by the Courts
shall be the final ones and must be immediately sent to the involved parties
and the procuracies of the same levels.
Article 320. Court sessions conducting simplified
procedures
1.
Involved parties, procurators of procuracies of the same levels must attend the
Court sessions conducting simplified procedures. If the procurators are absent,
the trial panels shall still hold the session. Involved parties may apply for
trial in their absence.
If the
defendants or the persons with relevant interests and duties are absent without
good and sufficient reasons though have been duly summoned, the Court sessions
shall be still carried out by the Judge.
2. The
Judge shall carry out the opening of the Court sessions according to
regulations in Article 239 of this Code.
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The
presentation, argument, question and answer and suggestion about the resolution
of the cases shall comply with regulations in Section 3 Chapter XIV of this
Code.
4. If at
the Court sessions, new details detected as prescribed in clause 3 Article 317
of this Code make the cases no longer eligible for resolution according to
simplified procedures, then the Judge shall consider issuing decisions to
transfer the cases for resolution according to common procedures. In these
cases, time limit for preparation for the resolution of the cases shall be
counted according to regulations in clause 4 Article 317 of this Code.
Article 321. Effect of judgments/decisions made according
to simplified procedures
1.
First-instance judgments/decisions of the Courts made according to simplified
procedures can be appealed against according to appellate procedures to request
the first-instance Courts to re-settle the cases according to appellate
simplified procedures.
2.
Judgments/decisions made according to simplified procedures can be appealed against
according to cassation/reopening procedures as provided for in this Code.
Chapter XIX
RESOLUTION OF CIVIL LAWSUITS ACCORDING TO
SIMPLIFIED PROCEDURE AT APPELLATE TRIALS
Article 322. Time limit for appeal against
judgments/decisions made according to simplified procedures
1. Time
limit for filing appeal against a judgment/decision of first-instance Court
issued according to simplified procedures shall be 07 days from the day on
which the judgment is pronounced. Regarding involved parties who were absent
from the Court sessions, time limit for them to appeal against
judgments/decisions shall be counted from the day on which such
judgments/decisions are received or the day on which such judgments/decisions are
posted.
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Article 323. Time limit for preparation for appellate
trials conducted according to simplified procedures
1. Within
01 month from the day on which the cases are accepted, for specific cases, the
Judge assigned to resolve the cases according to appellate procedures shall
issue one of the following decisions:
a) To
suspend the appellate process of the case;
b) To
terminate the appellate process of the case;
c) To
bring the case to appellate trial.
2. The
decisions to bring cases to trial shall contain the information specified in
clause 1 Article 290 of this Code. The decisions to bring cases to trial must
be immediately sent to persons related to the appeal process and the
procuracies of the same level, enclosed with the file cases for study.
Time
limit for the procuracies to study the case files shall be 05 working days
counting from the day on which the case files are received; when such time
limit expires, the procuracies must return them to the Courts.
3. If a
decision to terminate the appellate process for the case is issued, time limit
for preparation for the appellate trial shall be re-counted from the day on
which the Court resume the appellate trial process when the reasons for
suspension are resolved.
4. If new
details are found out as prescribed in clause 3 Article 317 of this Code, the
Courts shall issue decisions to transfer the cases for resolution according to
common procedures. In these cases, time limit for preparation for the
resolution of the cases shall be counted according to regulations in clause 4
Article 317 of this Code.
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1. Within
15 days from the day on which decisions to bring cases to appellate trial are
issued, the Judges shall hold the appellate Court sessions.
2.
Involved parties, procurators of procuracies of the same levels must attend the
appellate Court sessions. If the procurators are absent, the trial panels shall
still carry out the trials, unless the procuracies file appeals. Involved
parties may apply for trial in their absence.
If the
involved parties who do not file appeals are absent without good and sufficient
reasons though have been duly summoned, the Judges shall still carry out the
trials.
3. The
Judge shall present briefly the contents of the first-instance
judgments/decisions that are appealed against, contents of the appeals and the
enclosed materials/evidences (if any).
4.
Defense counsels of legitimate rights and interests of the involved parties
shall make presentation and the involved parties shall supplement opinions
about the contents of the appeals, present arguments, questions, answers and
opinions about the resolution of the cases.
5. When
the argument, questioning and answering finish, the procurators shall express
the procuracies’ opinions about the compliance with law during the resolution
of the civil lawsuits in the appellate stage.
Immediately
when the Court sessions finish, procurators must send the writings containing
procuracies’ opinions to the Courts to be kept in the case files.
6. When
reviewing judgments/decisions of first-instance Courts that are appealed
against, the Judges shall be entitled to:
a) Uphold
the judgments/decisions of first-instance Courts;
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c) Repeal
the judgments/decisions of first-instance Courts and transfer the case files to
first-instance Courts so that the cases could be resolve again according to
simplified procedure, or according to common procedures in cases conditions for
resolution according to simplified procedures are not fully satisfied;
d) Repeal
the first-instance judgments and terminate the resolution of the cases;
dd)
Terminate the appellate trials and uphold the first-instance judgments.
7.
Appellate judgments/decisions shall be legally effective from the day on which
the judgments/decisions are issued.
PART FIVE
PROCEDURES FOR REVIEWING LEGALLY EFFECTIVE
JUDGMENTS/DECISIONS
Chapter XX
CASSATION PROCEDURES
Article 325. Nature of cassation
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Article 326. Grounds and conditions for appeal according to
cassation procedures
1. A
legally effective judgment/decision of the Court shall be appealed against
according to cassation procedures when there is one of the following grounds:
a)
Conclusion in the judgment/decision is incompatible with the objective details
of the cases, causing damage to legitimate rights and interests of the involved
parties;
b) There
are serious violations against procedures that prevent involved parties from
executing their procedural rights and obligations, as the result, their
legitimate rights and interests are not protected as prescribed in law;
c) There
are mistakes in the application of law leading to the issuance of wrong
judgments/decisions, causing bad effect to legitimate rights and interests of
involved parties, infringing upon public benefits, State benefits, legitimate
rights and interests of the third parties.
2.
Persons competent to lodge appeals specified in Article 331 of this Code shall
lodge appeals against Courts’ judgments/decisions that are legally effective
when there is one of the grounds specified in clause 1 of this Article and
shall file applications as provided for in Article 328 of this Code or make
notifications/recommendations as prescribed in clauses 2 and 3 Article 327 of
this Code. If the judgments/decisions infringe upon public benefits, State
benefits, legitimate rights and interests of the third parties, the applications
are not required.
Article 327. Discovering legally effective judgments or
decisions of Courts which need to be reviewed according to cassation procedures
1. Within
01 year from the day on which the Court’s judgments/decisions takes legally
effect, if any legal violations in the judgments/decisions is discovered,
involved parties are entitled to submit written applications to persons
competent to lodge appeal specified in Article 331 of this Code for consideration
according to cassation procedures.
2. If the
Courts, the procuracies or other agencies/organizations/individuals discover
legal violations in the Courts’ judgments/decisions that are legally effective,
written notifications must be sent to persons competent to lodge appeals
provided for in Article 331 of this Code.
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Article 328. Application for reviewing legally effective
judgments or decisions according to cassation procedures
1. An
application for reviewing Courts’ judgments/decisions which are legally
effective according to cassation procedures must have the following principal
details:
a) Date
of making the application;
b) Name
and address of the applicant;
c) Name
of the Court’s legally effective judgment/decision subject to reviewing
according to cassation procedures;
d) Reasons
for the application, requests of the applicant;
dd)
Signature or fingerprints, applicable to applicants being individuals, or
signature and seal of lawful representatives, applicable to applicants being
agencies or organizations, in the end of the application. If the applicant is
an enterprise, the use of the seal shall comply with provisions of the Law on
Enterprise.
2.
Enclosed with the application shall be Courts' legally effective
judgments/decisions and materials and evidences (if any) to prove that the
applicants’ requests are well-grounded and lawful.
3. The
application and materials and/or evidences shall be sent to persons competent
to lodge appeals provided for in Article 331 of this Code.
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1.
Courts/procuracies shall receive applications that are submitted by the
involved parties directly at the Courts/procuracies or by post and shall record
to the application registers and issue receiving slips for involved parties.
Date of sending of application shall be calculated from the day on which the
involved parties submit the application at the Courts/procuracies or the
sending date written on the post seal.
2.
Courts/procuracies shall accept the applications only when all provisions
specified in Article 328 of this Code are satisfied. If the applications do not
satisfy conditions specified in Article 328 of this Code, the
Courts/Procuracies shall request the applicants to submit application for
amendment/supplement within 01 month from the day on which the requests from
the Courts/Procuracies are received. Upon the expiry of such period, if the
applicants fail to conduct amendment/supplement, the Courts/Procuracies shall
return the applications enclosed with explanation and note such cases in the
application registers.
3.
Persons competent to file appeals according to cassation procedures shall
assign persons to study the petitions, notifications, recommendations and case
files then request the persons competent to file appeals to consider and make
decisions. If the petitions are rejected, written notifications containing
explanation shall be sent to involved parties, agencies, organizations and
individuals that have sent the notifications/recommendations.
The Chief
Justice of the Supreme People’s Court shall assign Judges of the Supreme
People’s Court, the Chairperson of the Supreme People’s Procuracy shall assign
procurators of the Supreme People’s Procuracy to study the petitions,
notifications, recommendations, case files and report them to the Chief Justice
of the Supreme People’s Court and the Chairperson of the Supreme People’s
Procuracy for considering and making decisions on appeal. If the petitions are
rejected, the Chief Justice of the Supreme People’s Court, the Chairperson of
the Supreme People’s Procuracy shall, by themselves or authorize the Judge of
the Supreme People’s Court and procurators of the Supreme People’s Procuracy to
send written notifications containing explanation to the involved parties and
individuals that have sent the notifications/recommendations.
Article 330. Supplement, verification of materials and
evidences in cassation procedures
1.
Involved parties shall be entitled to provide materials and evidences for
persons competent to file appeals according to cassation procedures if such
materials and evidences have not been supplied to the first-instance Courts or
the appellate Courts because such Courts had not required or because the
involved parties failed to supplied due to good and sufficient reasons or
because the involved parties did not know about such materials and evidences
during the resolution of the cases.
2. During
the resolution of petitions for consideration of the legally effective
judgments/decisions of Courts according to cassation procedures, persons
competent to file appeals according to cassation procedures shall be entitled
to request the petitioners to supplement materials and evidences or inspect and
verify the materials and evidences by themselves if necessary.
Article 331. Persons competent to appeal according to
cassation procedures
1. The
Chief Justice of the Supreme People's Court and the Chairperson of the Supreme
People’s Procuracy shall be competent to appeal according to cassation
procedures against the legally effective judgments or decisions of the
Collegial People’s Court; legally effective judgments or decisions of other
Courts when it is deemed necessary, except for cassation decisions of the Council
of Judges of the Supreme People's Court.
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Article 332. Postponement and suspension of enforcement of
legally effective judgments or decisions
1.
Persons who are competent to appeal against legally effective judgments or
decisions of Courts may request the postponement of enforcement of judgments or
decisions in order to consider the appeals according to cassation procedures.
The postponement of enforcement of judgments shall comply with law regulations
on civil judgment execution.
2.
Persons who have appealed according to cassation procedures legally effective
judgments or decisions shall have the right to decide on the suspension of
enforcement of such judgments or decisions until the cassation decisions are
made.
Article 333. Decisions to appeal according to cassation
procedures
A
decision to appeal according to cassation procedures shall consist of the
following principal contents:
1. Date
and number of the appeal decision;
2.
Position of the person who makes the appeal decision;
3. Number
and date of the legally effective judgment or decision being appealed against;
4.
Decisions of the legally effective judgment or decision being appealed against;
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6. Legal
grounds for making the appeal decision;
7.
Whether the appeal is against parts or whole of the legally effective judgment
or decision;
8. Name
of the Court that is competent to conduct cassation of such case;
9.
Proposals of the appellant.
Article 334. Time limit for appeal according to cassation
procedures
1.
Persons competent to appeal according to cassation procedures are entitled to
lodge the appeal within 03 year from the day on which the Court’s
judgments/decisions takes legally effect, except for cases specified in clause
2 of this Article.
2. If the
time limit for appeal prescribed in clause 1 of this Article expires such time
limit shall be extended by 02 years from the day on which such time limit
expires if the following conditions are satisfied:
a) The
involved parties have submitted applications provided for in clause 1 Article
328 of this Code and maintain the application when the time limit for appeal
provided for in clause 1 of this Article has expired;
b)
Courts’ legally effective judgments/decisions are contrary to law as prescribed
in clause 1 Article 326 of this Code, seriously affecting legitimate rights and
interests of involved parties and/or third parties, public benefits, State
benefits and are subject to appeal to eliminate faults in such legally
effective judgments/decisions.
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1. Persons
who have appealed according to cassation procedures shall be entitled to modify
or supplement the appeals if the appeal time limit prescribed in Article 334 of
this Code has not yet expired. Such modification/supplement must be made under
decisions. Decisions to modify/supplement appeals must be sent according to
provisions of Article 336 of this Code.
2.
Persons who have appealed shall be entitled to withdraw parts or whole of the
appeal decisions before the opening of Court sessions or in cassation Court
sessions. Such withdrawal must be made under decisions.
3. After
receiving decisions to withdraw whole of the appeal, the cassation Courts shall
issue decisions to terminate the cassation trial.
Article 336. Forwarding decisions to appeal according to
cassation procedures
1.
Decisions to appeal according to cassation procedures must be immediately sent
to the Courts that have issued the legally effective judgments/decisions being
appealed against, the involved parties, the competent civil judgment-executing
agencies and persons whose interests and duties are related to the appealed
contents.
2. In
cases where the Chief Justices of the Supreme People's Court or the Chief
Justices of the Collegial People’s Courts appeal, the appeal decisions and the
case files must be immediately sent to the Procuracies of the same level. The
procuracies shall study the files within 15 days as from the day on which the
case files are received; upon the expiry of such time limit, the procuracies
must transfer the case files to the Courts competent to hear the cases
according to cassation procedures.
3. In
cases where the Chairperson of the Supreme People's Procuracy or the heads of
the Collegial People’s procuracies appeal, the appeal decisions must be immediately
sent to the Courts competent to hear the cases according to cassation
procedures.
Article 337. Jurisdiction to review cases according to
cassation procedures
1. The
Committee of Judges of the Collegial People’s Courts shall review according to cassation
procedures legally effective judgments/decisions of the provincial-level
people’s Courts or district-level people's courts, which are appealed against,
within competence as follows:
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b) If
courts’ legally effective judgments/decisions prescribed in point a of this
clause are complicated, or judgments/decisions have been reviewed according to
cassation procedures by Committee of Judges of Collegial People’s Courts,
through trial panels composed of 3 Judges, but no agreement is reached upon the
vote on the decisions on case resolution, then the whole of Committee of Judges
of Collegial People’s Courts shall review such judgments/decisions according to
cassation procedures.
2. The
Council of Judges of the Supreme People's Court shall review according to
cassation procedures legally effective judgments/decisions of Collegial
People’s Courts which are appealed against as follows:
a) The
Council of Judges of the Supreme People’s Court shall review according to
cassation procedures, through trial panels composed of 5 Judges, legally
effective judgments/decisions of Collegial People’s Courts that are appealed
against according to cassation procedures;
b) If
courts’ legally effective judgments/decisions prescribed in point a of this
clause are complicated, or judgments/decisions have been reviewed according to
cassation procedures by the Council of Judges of the Supreme People’s Court,
through trial panels composed of 5 Judges, but no agreement is reached upon the
vote on the decisions on case resolution, then the whole of Council of Judges
of Supreme People’s Courts shall review such judgments/decisions according to
cassation procedures.
3.
Complicated cases mentioned in point b clause 1 and point b clause 2 of this
Article are the following cases:
a) Law
provisions applicable to matters to be resolved in the case are unclear or are
not applied consistently;
b) There
is argument over the assessment of evidences and application of law provisions;
c) The
case resolution is related to public benefits, State benefits, human’s right
protection, civil right protection that are specially concerned.
4. Chief
Justices of Collegial People’s Courts shall consider deciding to conduct
cassation trials for cases specified in clause 1 of this Article. Chief
Justices of Supreme People’s Courts shall consider deciding to conduct
cassation trials for cases specified in clause 2 of this Article.
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Article 338. Participants in cassation review Court
sessions
1. The
cassation review Court sessions must be with the participation of the
Procuracies of the same level.
2. If it
is deemed necessary, the Court shall summon involved parties or their
representatives and defense counsels of their rights and interests or other
participants related to the appeal to the cassation review Court session; if
any of them is absent from the Court session, the cassation review trial panel
shall still carry on the session.
Article 339. Time limit for opening of cassation review
Court sessions
Within 04
months as from the day on which the appeals and the enclosed case files are
received, the Courts competent to cassation review must open Court sessions to
review cases according to cassation procedures.
Article 340. Preparations for cassation review Court
session
The Chief
Justice of the Court shall assign a Judge to prepare written explanation of the
case at the Court session. The written explanation shall summarize the case
contents and the judgments/decisions of the Courts of different levels as well
as the appealed contents. The explanation must be forwarded to members of the
Cassation Review panel not later than 07 days before the opening of the
cassation review Court sessions.
Article 341. Trial procedures at cassation review Court
sessions
1. After
the presiding Judge opens the Court session, a member of the Cassation Review
Panel shall present the brief contents of the case, the case handling process,
decisions of the legally effective judgments/decisions being appealed against,
grounds for the appeal, viewpoint of the appeal and proposals of the appellant. If the
appeal is lodge by a procuracy, the procuracy must present the appealed
contents.
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3. The
representative of the procuracy shall present the opinions of the procuracy on
the resolution of the case.
Immediately
after the Court session, the representative of the procuracy shall send the
writing containing opinions to the Court to be save in the case files.
4.
Members of the Cassation Review Panel shall express their opinions and discuss.
The Cassation review panel shall conduct deliberation and vote on the
resolution of the case and pronounce the decision on the resolution of the case
at the court. The deliberation must be conducted according to rules specified
in Article 264 of this Code.
5. If the
cassation review Court is conducted by the Committee of Judges of Collegial
People’s Court as prescribed in point a clause 1 Article 337 of this Code,
decisions of the trial panel must be approved by all members of the panel.
For
cassation review trial conducted as prescribed in point b clause 1 Article 337
of this Code, the Court session of the whole of the Committee of Judges of the
Collegial People’s Court must be under the presence of at least two-thirds of
present members of the committee; decisions of the Judge committee must be
approved by more than a haft of members of the committee.
6. If the
cassation review Court is conducted by the Committee of Judges of the Supreme
People’s Court as prescribed in point a clause 2 Article 337 of this Code,
decisions of the trial panel must be approved by all members of the panel.
For
cassation review trial conducted as prescribed in point b clause 2 Article 337
of this Code, the Court session of the whole of the Committee of Judges of the
Supreme People’s Court must be under the presence of at least two-thirds of
present members of the committee; decisions of the Judge committee must be
approved by more than a haft of members of the committee.
Article 342. Scope of the cassation review
1. The
Cassation Review Panels shall only review parts of legally effective
judgments/decisions being appealed against or related to the review of the
appealed contents.
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Article 343. Jurisdiction of the Cassation Review Panels
The
Cassation Review Panels shall have the following powers:
1. To
reject the appeals and uphold the court’s legally effective
judgments/decisions;
2. To
repeal the legally effective judgments/decisions of Courts and uphold the
lawful judgments/decisions of the subordinate courts, which have been annulled
or amended;
3. To
repeal parts or the whole of courts’ legally effective judgments/decisions to
retry according to first-instance procedures or appellate procedures;
4. To
repeal legally effective judgments/decisions and terminate the resolution of
the cases;
5. To
modify parts or the whole of the legally effective judgments/decisions.
Article 344. Upholding the subordinate courts' lawful
judgments or decisions which have been annulled or amended
The
Cassation Review Panels shall issue decisions to repeal legally effective
judgments/decisions being appealed and uphold the judgments/decisions rendered
legally by subordinate Courts but partially or entirely annulled or amended by
legally effective judgments/decisions being appealed.
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Article 345. Repealing parts or the whole of courts’
legally effective judgments/decisions to retry according to first-instance
procedures or appellate procedures
The
Cassation Review Panels shall issue decisions to repeal partially or entirely
courts’ legally effective judgments/decisions being appealed against for
re-trials according to the first-instance or appellate procedures in the
following cases:
1. The
collection of evidences and proof have been carried out insufficiently or
unconformably with the provisions of Chapter VII of this Code;
2. The
decisions in the judgments or decisions do not conform to the objective details
of cases or serious errors are committed in the application of law;
3. The
composition of the first-instance or appellate trial panel is not conformable
with the provisions of this Code or other serious procedural violations have
been committed affecting lawful rights and interests of involved parties.
Article 346. Repealing legally effective judgments and/or
decisions and termination of case resolution
The
Cassation Review Panels shall issue decisions to annul legally effective
judgments/decisions and terminate the case resolution if the cases fall under
one of the circumstances stipulated in Article 217 of this Code.
If the judgments/decisions
are partially or entirely enforced, the cassation review panel shall resolve
the consequences of such enforcement.
Article 347. Modification of parts or the whole of the
legally effective judgments/decisions
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a)
Materials and/or evidences in the case files are sufficient, clear and
well-grounded to clarify details in the cases;
b) The
modification of judgments/decisions which are appealed against does not affect
rights and obligations of other agencies, organizations and individuals.
2. If the
judgments/decisions are partially or entirely enforced, the cassation review panel
shall resolve the consequences of such enforcement.
Article 348. Cassation review decisions
1. The
Cassation Review Panels shall issue decisions in the name of the Socialist
Republic of Vietnam.
2. A
cassation review decision must contain the following principal contents:
a) Date
and place of opening the Court session;
b) Full
names of members of the Cassation Review Panel. In cases where the Cassation
Review Panel is the Committee of Judges of a Collegial People’s Court or the
Council of Judges of the Supreme People's Court, the full name and title of the
presiding Judge and the number of members participating in the trial shall be
specified;
c) Full
names of the Court clerk and the procurator participating in the Court session;
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dd) Full
names and addresses of the involved parties in the case;
e)
Summary of the contents of the case, decisions of the legally effective
judgment or decision being appealed against;
g)
Decision to appeal; grounds for making the appeal;
h)
Assessment of the Cassation Review Panel where opinion about the resolution of
the case must be analyzed and grounds for acceptance or non-acceptance of the
appeal must be specified;
i)
Points, clauses or articles of the Civil Procedure Code and/or other
legislative documents on which the Cassation Review Panel bases to make
decision;
k)
Decision of the Cassation Review Panel.
3.
Decisions of the Cassation review panels of Councils of Judges of the Supreme
People’s Court must contain argument to prove that provisions of law can be
also understood in different ways; legal matters and facts must be explained
and reasons and resolution for such matters and legal provisions to be applied
(if any) must be specified.
Article 349. Effect of the cassation review decisions
The
cassation review decisions shall take legal effect as from the date the
Cassation Review Panels issue them.
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1. Within
05 working days from the day on which a cassation review decision is issued,
the cassation review trial panel shall send it to the following agencies,
organizations and individuals:
a) The
involved parties and other persons with related interests and obligations under
the cassation review decisions;
b) The
Courts which have rendered legally effective judgments/decisions being appealed
against;
c) The
procuracy of the same level, the competent civil judgment-executing agencies.
2.
Cassation review decisions shall be posted by Courts competent to review on
their e-portals (if any), except for decisions containing information specified
in clause 2 Article 109 of this Code.
Chapter XXI
REOPENING PROCEDURES
Article 351. Nature of reopening procedures
Reopening
means the review of legally effective judgments/decisions which are appealed
against due to the appearance of newly detected details which may substantially
change the contents of the judgments/decisions and about which the Courts and
involved parties did not know when the Courts rendered such judgments or
decisions.
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Legally
effective judgments/decisions shall be appealed against according to reopening
procedures when there is one of the following grounds:
1.
Important details of the case were newly discovered which the involved parties
could not have known in the course of resolving the case;
2. There
are grounds to prove that the conclusions of the expert witnesses and
translations of interpreters were untruthful or evidences were falsified;
3.
Judges, People’s Jurors or procurators intentionally diverted the case files or
deliberately made unlawful conclusions;
4. The
criminal, administrative, civil, marriage and family, business, commercial or
labor judgments/decisions of Courts or decisions of State agencies on which the
Courts based themselves to resolve the cases had already been annulled.
Article 353. Notice and verification of newly discovered
details
1. The
involved parties, agencies, organizations or individuals shall be entitled to
discover new details of cases and notify them in writing to the persons
competent to appeal defined in Article 354 of this Code.
2. In
cases where new details of cases are discovered, the procuracies and the Courts
must notify them in writing to the persons entitled to appeal defined in
Article 354 of this Code.
Article 354. Persons competent to appeal according to
reopening procedures
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2. The
Chief Justices of the Collegial People’s Courts and the chairpersons of the
shall be competent to appeal according to the reopening procedures against
legally effective judgments/decisions issued by People’s Courts of provinces or
People’s Courts of districts within competence.
3.
Persons who have appealed against legally effective judgments/decisions shall
have the power to suspend the enforcement of such judgments/decisions until the
reopening decisions are made.
Article 355. Time limit for appeal according to reopening
procedures
The time
limit for appeal according to reopening procedures shall be 01 year counting
from the day on which the persons competent to appeal acquire grounds for
appeal according to reopening procedures prescribed in Article 305 of this
Code.
Article 356. Jurisdiction of the Reopening trial Panels
The
reopening trial Panels shall have the following powers:
1. To
reject the appeals and uphold the legally effective judgments or decisions;
2. To
repeal legally effective judgments/decisions for first-instance retrial
according to the procedures prescribed by this Code;
3. To
repeal legally effective judgments/decisions and terminate the resolution of
the cases.
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Other
regulations on reopening procedures shall comply with the regulations on
cassation procedures prescribed in this Code.
Chapter XXII
SPECIAL PROCEDURES FOR REVIEWING DECISIONS
OF THE COUNCIL OF JUDGES OF THE SUPREME PEOPLE’S COURT
Article 358. Requests, recommendations and applications for
reviewing decisions of the Council of Judges of the Supreme People’s Court
1. When
there are grounds to prove that decisions of the Council of Judges of the
Supreme People’s Courts are seriously contrary to law or there are newly
discovered important details which might basically change the contents of the
decisions that are unknown to Councils of Judges of the Supreme People’s Court
and involved parties when such decisions are issued, if there are requests of
the Standing committee of the National Assembly, recommendations of National
Assembly’s Judiciary Committee; recommendations of Chairperson of the Supreme People’s
Procuracy or at the requests of the Chief Justice of the Supreme People’s
Court, then such decisions shall be reviewed by the Council of Judges of the
Supreme People’s Court.
2. If it
is requested by the Standing committee of the National Assembly, the Chief
Justice of the Supreme People’s Court shall report such requests to the Council
of Judges of the Supreme People’s Court for reviewing the decisions of the
Council of Judges of the Supreme People’s Court.
3. If
there are recommendations by the National Assembly’s Judiciary Committee and/or
recommendations of the Chairperson of the Supreme People’s Procuracy or the
Chief Justice of the Supreme People’s Court when new violations or details are
discovered, then the Chief Justice shall report such to the Council of Judges
of the Supreme People’s Court for considering such recommendations/requests.
4.
Meetings of the Council of Judges of the Supreme People’s Court for considering
recommendations/requests specified in clause 3 of this Article must be attended
by the Chairperson of the Supreme People’s Procuracy.
Article 359. Procedures for reviewing decisions of the
Council of Judges of the Supreme People’s Court
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2. Within
01 month from the day on which recommendations of the National Assembly’s
Judiciary Committee or recommendations of the Chairperson of the Supreme
People’s Procuracy are received or from the day on which the Chief Justice of
the Supreme People’s Court make written requests, the Council of Judges of the
Supreme People’s Court must hold meetings for considering such
recommendations/requests.
The
Supreme People’s Court shall notify in writing the time of opening of meetings
for considering recommendations/requests to the Chairperson of the Supreme
People’s Procuracy.
Representatives
of the National Assembly’s Judiciary Committee shall be invited to attend the
meetings of the Council of Judges of the Supreme People’s Court to consider the
recommendations of the National Assembly’s Judiciary Committee.
3. The
Council of Judges of the Supreme People’s Court shall consider the
recommendations/requests according to the following order:
a) The
Chief Justice of the Supreme People’s Court shall, by themselves or by
assigning a member of the Council of Judges of the Supreme People’s Court,
present briefly the contents of the cases and the processing of the cases;
b)
Representatives of the National Assembly’s Judiciary Committee, the Chairperson
of the Supreme People’s Procuracy, the Chief Justice of the Supreme People’s
Court which submitted recommendations/requests for reviewing decisions of the
Council of Judges of the Supreme People’s Court shall present the contents of
the recommendations/requests; grounds for such recommendations/requests;
analysis and assessment of details of the cases, old evidences and additional
evidences (if any) to clarify the serious violations against law in the
decisions of the Council of Judges of the Supreme People’s Court or new
important details which can basically change the contents of such decisions;
c) In
case of reviewing the recommendations of the National Assembly’s Judiciary
Committee or reviewing requests of the Chief Justice of the Supreme People’s
Court, the Chairperson of the Supreme People’s Procuracy shall present his/her
viewpoints and reasons for agreement or disagreement with such
recommendations/requests.
Opinions
of the Chairperson of the Supreme People’s Procuracy must be presented in
writing that bear the signature of the Chairperson of the Supreme People’s
Procuracy and must be sent to the Supreme People’s Court within 05 working days
from the day on which the meetings finish;
d) The
Council of Judges of the Supreme People’s Court shall discuss and vote under
the majority rule on the agreement or disagreement with the recommendations/requests
for reviewing its decisions;
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If the
recommendations/requests are not agreed with, the Council of Judges of the
Supreme People’s Court must notify such in writing to individuals and agencies
proposing recommendations/requests and clearly state the reasons;
e) All
happenings at the meetings for considering recommendations/requests and
decisions approved at the meetings must be recorded in the meeting minutes and
included in the recommendation/request-considering files;
g) Within
05 working days from the day on which the meetings for considering
recommendations/requests for reviewing its decisions, the Council of Judge of
the Supreme People’s Court shall send to the Chairperson of the Supreme
People’s Procuracy and the National Assembly’s Judiciary Committee
notifications of its agreement or disagreement with such
recommendations/requests.
4. Upon
receiving requests of Standing Committee of the National Assembly or decisions
of the Council of Judges of the Supreme People’s Court on the opening of
meetings for reviewing its decisions as prescribed in point dd clause 3 of this
Article, the Chief Justice of the Supreme People’s Court shall conduct the
study of the case files and the verification and collection of materials and
evidences when necessary.
The study
of case files, the verification and collection of materials and evidences must
clarify whether there are serious violations against law or new important details
which may basically change the contents of decisions of the Judicial Council of
the Supreme People’s Court.
5. Within
04 months from the day on which requests of the Standing Committee of the
National Assembly specified in clause 2 Article 358 of this Code or from the
day on which the decisions of the Council of Judges of the Supreme People’s
Court specified in point dd clause 3 of this Article are received, the Council
of Judges of the Supreme People’s Court shall hold meetings with the
participation of all the Judges of the Supreme People’s Court to review its
decisions.
The
Supreme People’s Court shall send the Supreme People’s Procuracy written
notifications of time of opening the meetings for reviewing decisions of the
Council of Judges of the Supreme People’s Court enclosed with the case files.
Within 15 days from the day on which the case files are received, the Supreme
People’s Procuracy must return them to the Supreme People’s Court.
The
meetings held by the Council of Judges of the Supreme People’s Court must be
attended by the Chairperson of the Supreme People’s Procuracy. If it is deemed
necessary, the Supreme People’s Court may invite relevant agencies,
organizations and individuals to attend the meetings.
6. The
Chairperson of the Supreme People’s Procuracy must attend the meetings for
reviewing decisions of the Council of Judges of the Supreme People’s Court and
express his/her viewpoints on whether or not there are serious violations
against law or new important details which can basically change the contents of
the decisions of the Council of Judges of the Supreme People’s Court and
his/her opinions about the resolution of the cases.
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7. Within
01 month from the day on which the Council of Judges of the Supreme People’s
Court make decisions specified in clause 1 Article 360 of this Code, the
Supreme People’s Court shall send such decisions to the Standing Committee of
the National Assembly, the National Assembly’s Judiciary Committee, the Supreme
People’s Procuracy and People’s Court which have been in charge of resolving
the cases and involved parties.
Article 360. Competence to review decisions of the Council
of Judges of the Supreme People’s Court
1. After
listening to the reports of the Chief Justice of the Supreme People’s Court and
opinions of the Chairperson of the Supreme People’s Procuracy and of relevant
agencies, organizations and individuals that are invited to attend the meetings
(if any) and when deeming that decisions of the Council of Judges of the Supreme
People’s Court are seriously contrary to law or have new important details that
basically change the contents of such decisions; or when deeming that legally
effective judgments/decisions of inferior Courts are seriously contrary to law
or have new important details that basically change the contents of such
decisions, then on a case-by-case basis, the Council of Judges of the Supreme
People’s Court shall make decisions to:
a) Repeal
decisions of the Council of Judges of the Supreme People’s Court, repeal
legally effective judgments/decisions and decisions on contents of the cases;
b) Repeal
decisions of the Council of Judges of the Supreme People’s Court, repeal
legally effective judgments/decisions and determine responsibility of the
Supreme People’s Court for compensation for damages caused to involved parties
as the result of the unconformable decisions that are repealed or determine
responsibility for reimbursing the value of properties according to law;
c) Repeal
decisions of the Council of Judges of the Supreme People’s Court, repeal
legally effective judgments/decisions to transfer the case files to the
inferior Courts to resolve according to law.
2.
Decisions of the Council of Judges of the Supreme People’s Court must be approved
by at least three-fourths of its members to be effective.
PART SIX
PROCEDURES FOR RESOLUTION OF CIVIL MATTERS
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GENERAL REGULATIONS ON PROCEDURES FOR
RESOLUTION OF CIVIL MATTERS
Article 361. Scope of application
Civil
matters mean a situation where agencies, organizations or individuals have no
disputes but request Courts to recognize or not to recognize a legal event
which serves as a basis for the rise of civil, marriage and family, business,
commercial or labor rights and obligations of their own or of other agencies,
organizations or individuals; or request Courts to recognize their civil,
marriage and family, business, commercial or labor rights.
Provisions
of this Part shall be applied for the resolution of civil matters specified in
clauses 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 7, 8, 9 and 10 Article 27, clauses 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7,
8, 10 and 11 Article 29, clauses 1, 2, 3 and 6 Article 31, clauses 1, 2 and 5
Article 33 of this Code. If the civil matters are not specified in this Part,
other provisions of this Code shall be applicable.
Article 362. Petitions for the Court resolution of civil
matters
1.
Persons requesting Courts to resolve civil matters must send their petitions to
competent Courts defined in Section 2 Chapter III of this Code.
Any
enforcers requesting the Courts to resolve civil matters according to
provisions of the Law on enforcement of civil judgments shall have rights and
obligations of persons requesting resolution of civil matters provided for in
this Code.
2. A
petition shall contain the following principal contents:
a) Date
of making the petition;
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c) Name,
address; phone number, fax number, e-mail address (if any) of the petitioner;
d)
Specific issues requested to be resolved by the court; reasons, purposes and
bases of the request for Court resolution of such civil matters;
dd) Names
and addresses of persons who are related to the resolution of such civil
matters (if any);
e) Other
information that are deemed by the petitioner to be necessary for the
resolution of his/her petition;
dd)
Signature or fingerprints, applicable to petitioners being individuals, or
signature and seal of lawful representatives, applicable to applicants being
agencies or organizations, in the end of the application. If the petitioner is
an enterprise, the use of the seal shall comply with provisions of the Law on
Enterprise.
3. The
petition must be accompanied by materials and/or evidences to prove that the
petitions are well-grounded and lawful.
Article 363. Procedures for receiving and processing
petitions
1.
Procedures for receiving petitions shall comply with regulations in clause 1
Article 191 of this Code.
Within 0
working days from the day on which the petition and accompanied materials and
evidences are received, the Chief Justice of the Court shall assign a Judge to
handle the petition.
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3. When
the petition is satisfactory, the Judge shall carry out the procedures for
acceptance of the civil matters.
Upon the
expiry of the time limit specified in clause 2 of this Article, if the
petitioner fails to amend/supplement the petition, the Judge shall return the
petition and the accompanied materials and evidences to the petitioner.
4. If the
petition and accompanied materials and/or evidences are deemed satisfactory to
be accepted, the Judge shall carry out as follows:
a) The
Court shall notify the petitioner about the payment of charge for civil matter
resolution within 05 working days from the day on which the notice of charge
payment is received, unless such petitioner is exempted from the charge as
prescribed in law on fees and charges;
b) The
Court shall accept the petition when the petitioner submit to the Court the
receipt of civil-matter resolution charge;
c) If the
petitioner is exempted from or does not have to pay the charge, the Judge shall
accept the civil matter from the day on which the petition is received.
Article 364. Returning petitions
1. The
petition shall be returned from the Court in the following cases:
a) The
petitioner is not entitled to file the petition or does not have sufficient
civil procedure act capacity;
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c) The
civil matter does not fall within the competence of the Court;
d) The
petitioner fails to amend/supplement the petition within the time limit
specified in clause 2 Article 363 of this Code;
dd) The
petitioner fails to pay charge within the time limit specified in point a
clause 4 Article 363 of this Code, unless he/she is exempted from or does not
have to pay charge or the charge is paid late due to force majeure events or
objective obstacles;
e) The
petitioner withdraw the petition;
g) Other
cases provided for in law.
2. When
returning the petition and accompanied materials and evidences, the Court shall
notify in writing containing explanation.
3. The
complaints about the return of the petition and resolution thereof shall comply
with regulations in Article 194 of this Code.
Article 365. Notices on the acceptance of petitions
1. Within
03 working days from the day on which the petition is accepted, the Court shall
notify the petitioner, person with interests and duties relevant to the civil
matter resolution and the procuracy of the same level in writing of the
acceptance of the petition.
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a) Date
of making of the notice;
b) Name
and address of the Court accepting the petition;
c) Name
and address of the involved parties;
d)
Specific matters that the involved parties request the Court to resolve;
dd) List
of materials and evidences that are accompanied by the petition;
e) Time
limit for person with relevant interests and duties to provide opinions in
writing to the Court about the petition and accompanied materials and evidences
(if any);
g) Legal
consequences of cases where the person with relevant interests and duties fail
to submit the Court their opinions in writing for the petition for civil matter
resolution.
Article 366. Preparation for petition consideration
1. Time
limit for preparation for petition consideration shall be 01 month from the day
on which the Court accept the petition, unless there are other provisions in
this Code.
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a) If the
materials and evidences are not sufficient to serve as basis for the Court to
resolve the matter, the Court shall request the involved parties to supplement
materials and evidences within 05 working days from the day on which the
request is received;
b) Upon
the request of the involved parties or when it is deemed necessary, the Judge
shall issue decision to request agencies, organizations and individuals to
provide materials and evidences; summon witnesses, request property expertise
and price assessment. If the time limit for preparation for petition consideration
specified in clause 1 of this Article expires but the property expertise and/or
price assessment results have not been produced, such time limit shall be
extended for not exceeding 01 month;
c) Issue
decision to terminate the consideration of petition and return the petition and
accompanied materials and evidences if the petitioner withdraws the petition;
d) Issue
decision to open a meeting to resolve civil matter.
3. The
Courts must immediately send the decision to open the meeting to resolve civil
matter and the dossiers on the civil matter to the procuracy of the same level
for study. The procuracy must study them within 07 days from the day on which
the dossier is received; when this time limit expires, the procuracy must
return it to the Court for holding a meeting to resolve the civil matter.
4. The
Court shall open a meeting to resolve civil matter within 15 days from the day
on which the decision to open the meeting is issued.
Article 367. Participants in meetings for resolving civil
matters
1.
Procurators of the procuracies of the same level must attend the meetings. In
cases where they are absent, the Court shall still conduct the meeting.
2. The
petitioner or their lawful representatives or defense counsels of their rights
and interests must participate in the meeting according to the summon of the
court.
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3. Person
with relevant interests and duties or their lawful representatives or defense
counsels of their rights and interests must participate in the meeting
according to the summon of the court. In case of necessity, the Court may
summon witnesses, expert-witnesses and/or interpreters to attend the meetings.
If any of them is absent, the Court shall decide to postpone the meetings or to
proceed with the meetings.
Article 368. Decision on replacement of presiding officers
in the process of resolution of civil matters
1. Before
opening the meeting, the replacement of the Judge or clerk of meeting shall be
decided by the Chief Justice of the Court being in charge of such civil matter;
if the to be-replaced is the Chief Justice of the Court being in charge of the
civil matter, the replacement shall be decided by the Chief Justice of the
immediately superior court.
2. In the
meeting for resolution of civil matters, the replacement of Judges or clerks of
meeting shall be carried out as follows:
a) If the
civil matter is handled by a Judge, the replacement of Judge or clerk of
meeting shall be decided by the Chief Justice of the Court being in charge of
such civil matter; if the to be-replaced is the Chief Justice of the Court
being in charge of the civil matter, the replacement shall be decided by the
Chief Justice of the immediately superior court;
b) If the
civil matter is handled by a civil matter-resolving councils composed of 3
Judges, the replacement of members of the Council or the clerk of meeting shall
be decided by the civil matter-resolving council.
3. Before
opening the meeting, the replacement of procurator shall be decided by the
chairperson of the procuracy of the same level.
In the
meeting, the replacement of the procurator shall be decided by the Judge or the
civil matter-resolving council. If the procurator must be replaced, the Judge
or the civil matter-resolving council shall issue decisions to postpone the
meeting and notify such replacement to the procuracy.
The
appointment of a procurator to take place of the replaced one shall be decided
by the chairperson of the procuracy of the same level. If the to be-replaced
procurator is the chairperson of the procuracy, the replacement shall be
decided by the chairperson of the immediately superior procuracy.
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1. A
meeting to resolve civil matters shall be conducted in the following order:
a) The
clerk of meeting shall report to the Judge and civil matter-resolving council
about the presence or absence of participants in the meeting;
b) The
Judge shall open the meeting; check the presence or absence of persons who are
summoned to the meeting and their identity cards, introduce and explain rights
and obligations of participants in the meeting;
c)
Defense counsel of rights and interests of the petitioner, the petitioner or
his/her lawful representative shall present specific issues that are requested
to be dealt with by the court; reasons, purposes and grounds for requesting the
Court resolution of such civil matters;
d)
Related persons or their lawful representatives shall express their opinions on
matters pertaining to their rights and obligations in the resolution of the
civil matters;
dd)
Witnesses shall present their opinions; or expert-witnesses shall present their
conclusions and explain issues which remain unclear or contradictory (if any);
e) The
Judge and the civil matter-resolving council shall review the materials and
evidences;
g) The
procurator shall present the procuracy's views on the resolution of the civil
matters and shall send the writing containing opinions for the Court to save in
the civil matter files when the meeting finishes;
h) The
Judge and the civil matter-resolving council shall consider and decide to
accept or not to accept the request for resolution of the civil matters.
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Article 370. Decision on resolution of civil matters
1. A
decision to resolve civil matters shall contain the following principal contents:
a) Date
of making the decision;
b) Name
of the Court that issues the decision;
c) Full
names of the Judge, procurator, meeting clerk;
d) Full
name and address of the petitioner for the resolution of civil matters;
dd)
Specific matters requested to be resolved by the court;
e) Names
and addresses of persons with relevant interests and duties;
g)
Assessment of the Court and grounds for accepting or not accepting the
petition;
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i)
Court's decisions;
k) Court
fees to be paid.
2.
Decisions to resolve civil matters must be forwarded to the procuracies of the
same level, the petitioners for the resolution of civil matters and person with
interests and duties relevant to the resolution of civil matters within 05
working days from the day on which the decisions are issued.
The
forwarding of decisions to resolve civil matters to enforcement authorities
shall comply with provisions of the Law on enforcement of civil judgments.
3.
Legally effective courts’ decisions to resolve civil matters that are relevant
to the change of civil statuses of individuals must be sent to People’s
Committees where such individuals registered for civil statuses according to
provisions of the Law on civil status.
4.
Legally effective courts’ decisions to resolve civil matters shall be published
on e-portal of the Courts (if any), except for decisions containing information
specified in clause 2 Article 109 of this Code.
Article 371. Appeal and appeal against civil
matter-resolving decisions
Petitioners
and persons with interests and duties relevant to civil matter resolution shall
be entitled to appeal, the procuracies of the same level and immediate superior
procuracy shall be entitled to appeal against civil matter-resolving decisions
in order to request the immediate superior Court to re-settle them according to
the appellate procedures, except for those prescribed in clause 7 Article 27,
Clauses 2 and 3, Article 29 of this Code.
Article 372. Appeal time limits
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2. The
procuracies at the same level shall be entitled to appeal against civil
matter-resolving decisions within 10 days, the immediate superior procuracies
shall be entitled to appeal within 15 days as from the day on which the Courts
issue such decisions.
Article 373. Consideration of appeals, appeals
1. Time
limit for preparation for consideration of appeals shall be 15 days from the
day on which the Courts receive the appeals.
2. Within
the time limit for preparation for consideration of appeals, the Courts shall
conduct the following activities:
a) If
materials and evidences are not sufficient to serve as basis for the Courts to
resolve the case, the Courts shall request the involved parties to supplement
materials and evidences within 05 working days from the day on which the
requests are received;
b) Upon
the request of the involved parties or when it is deemed necessary, the Judge
shall issue decisions requesting agencies, organizations and individuals to
supply materials and evidences; summon witnesses, request expertise and price
appraisal. If the time limit specified in clause 1 of this Article expires but
the expertise/price appraisal results have not been produced, the time limit
for preparation for consideration of appeals may be extended for not exceeding
15 days;
c) Within
the time limit for preparation for consideration of appeals, if all the
appellants withdraw their appeal petitions or the procuracies withdraw their
appeal petitions, the Courts shall issue decisions to terminate the consideration
of petitions according to appellate procedures. In these cases, civil
matter-resolving decisions according to first-instance procedures shall
effective from the days on which the appellate trial Courts issue the
termination decisions;
d) The Courts
shall decide to open the appellate meeting for the resolution of civil matters.
3. The
Courts must immediately send such decisions to open appellate meetings to
resolve civil matters and the civil matter files to the procuracies of the same
level for study. The procuracies must study them within 07 days from the day on
which the files are received; after this time limit, the procuracies must
return the files to the Courts for holding meetings to resolve the civil
matters.
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Article 374. Participants in appellate meetings to resolve
civil matters
1. The
procurators of procuracies of the same level shall participate in the appellate
meeting to resolve civil matters; if the procurators are absent, the Court
shall still hold the meeting, unless a procuracy appeals against the appeal
review.
2.
Persons applying appeal petitions, their lawful representatives and defense
counsels of their rights and interests must participate in meetings according
to the subpoena of the Court.
If the
appellant is absent for the first time due to plausible reasons, the Court
shall postpone the civil matter-resolving appellate meeting, unless the
appellant request for resolution in their absence. If the appellant has been
summoned twice but is still absent, he/she shall be deemed to waive their
appeal and the Court shall issue decisions to terminate the appeal review of
civil matter in the appeal, unless he/she apply for resolution in their absence
or due to force majeure events or objective obstacles.
3.
Persons with relevant interests and duties, their lawful representatives and
defense counsels of their rights and interests shall be summoned by the Court
to participate in the meeting. In case of necessity, the Court may summon
witnesses, expert-witness and/or interpreters to attend the meetings. If any of
them is absent, the Courts shall decide to postpone the meetings or to proceed
with the meetings.
Article 375. Procedures for conducting appellate meetings
to resolve civil matters
1. An
appellate meeting to resolve civil matters shall be conducted in the following
order:
a) The
meeting clerk shall report on the presence or absence of meeting participants;
b) The
Judge shall open the meeting; check the presence or absence of persons who are
summoned to the meeting and their identity cards, introduce and explain rights
and obligations of participants in the meeting;
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If there
is only appeal from the procuracy, the procurator shall present about the
appealed contents and grounds for such appeal. If there is both appeal and
appeal, involved parties shall present about the appealed contents and grounds
for such appeal, then the procurator shall present about the appealed contents
and grounds therefor. If the procuracy does not appeal, the procurator shall
express their opinions of the procuracy about the handling of the appeal before
the appellate panel makes decision.
Right
after the meeting finishes, the procurator shall send the written opinion to
the Court to be recorded in civil matter files;
d)
Defense counsel of rights and interests of person with relevant interests and
duties, persons with relevant interests and duties or their lawful
representatives shall express their opinions on matters pertaining to their
rights and obligations in the appealed contents;
dd)
Witnesses shall present their opinions; or expert-witnesses shall present their
conclusions and explain issues which remain unclear or contradictory.
2. If any
person summoned by the Court to the meeting is absent, the Judge shall
pronounce the testimonies, materials and evidences provided by such person.
3. The
appellate panel shall consider the decision of the first-instance Court that is
appealed against and relevant materials and evidences and issue one of the
following decisions:
a) To
uphold the decision on resolution of civil matter issued by the first-instance
Court;
b) To
modify the decision on resolution of civil matter issued by the first-instance
Court;
c) To
repeal the decision on resolution of civil matter issued by first-instance
Court to re-settle according to first-instance procedures;
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dd)
Terminate the consideration of the petition according to appellate procedures
if in the meeting all the appellants withdraw their appeal petitions and the
procuracy withdraw the appeal petition.
4.
Decisions to conduct appellate review of civil matter resolution shall take
effect from the day on which they are issued and shall be sent to agencies,
organizations and individuals as prescribed in clauses 2 and 3 Article 370 of
this Code.
5.
Legally effective decisions to conduct appellate review of civil matter
resolution shall be posted on e-portal of the Court (if any), except for
decisions containing information specified in clause 2 Article 109 of this
Code.
Chapter XXIV
PROCEDURES FOR RESOLUTION OF PETITIONS FOR
DECLARING A PERSON LACKING CIVIL ACT CAPACITY, HAVING LIMITED CIVIL-ACT
CAPACITY OR HAVING LIMITED COGNITION OR BEHAVIOR CONTROL
Article 376. Right to file petitions for declaring a person
lacking civil act capacity, having limited civil-act capacity or having limited
cognition or behavior control
1. People
with relevant rights and interests and concerned agencies and organizations may
file petitions to Courts for declaring a person lacking civil act capacity,
having limited civil-act capacity or having limited cognition or behavior
control.
2. Adult
people having limited cognition due to physical and mental conditions but do
not lack civil capacity may file petitions to Courts for declaring them having
limited cognition or behavior control according to provisions of the Civil
Code.
Article 377. Preparation for consideration of petitions
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Article 378. Decisions to declare a person lacking civil
act capacity, having limited civil-act capacity or having limited cognition or
behavior control
If the
petitions are accepted, Courts shall issue decisions to declare a person
lacking civil act capacity, having limited civil-act capacity or having limited
cognition or behavior control.
In the
decision to declare a person having limited capacity of exercise, the Court
shall determine lawful representative of the person with limited capacity of
exercise and scope of representation.
In the
decision to declare a person having limited cognition or behavior control, the
Court must appoint his/her guardian and determine rights and duties of such
guardian.
Article 379. Right to file petitions for repealing
decisions to declare a person lacking civil act capacity, having limited
civil-act capacity or having limited cognition or behavior control
When a
person who is declared by a Court to be lacking of legal capacity, having
limited civil-act capacity or having limited cognition or behavior control is
no longer in the declared conditions, then such person or persons with relevant
rights and interests or concerned agencies or organizations may file petitions
to the Court for issuing a decision to repeal the decision to declare the lack
of legal capacity or limited civil-act capacity or limited cognition or
behavior control.
Article 380. Decisions of the Courts in case of accepting
the petitions for repealing decisions to declare a person lacking civil act
capacity, having limited civil-act capacity or having limited cognition or
behavior control
If the
petitions are accepted, the Courts shall issue decisions to repeal the
decisions to declare a person lacking civil act capacity, having limited
civil-act capacity or having limited cognition or behavior control.
Chapter XXV
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Article 381. Petitions for issuing notices on search of
persons absent from their residence places
1.
Persons with related rights and interests shall be entitled to request Courts
to issue notices on search of persons absent from their residence places when
such persons are absent for 06 consecutive months or more, and at the same time
request Courts to apply measures for management of the properties of the absent
persons under the provisions of the Civil Code.
2.
Enclosed with the petitions for issuing notices on search of persons absent
from their residence places, the petitioners shall send materials and evidences
to prove that such persons are absent for 06 consecutive months or more. In
case of petitions for the Courts to take measures to manage the properties of
the absent persons, the petitioners must provide materials and evidences on the
situation of properties of the absent persons, the management of the existing
properties as well as the list of the absent persons’ relatives.
Article 382. Preparation for consideration of petitions for
issuing notices on search of persons absent from their residence places
Within
the above-mentioned time limit, the Courts may issue decisions to terminate the
petition consideration if the persons on search notice return and request the
Courts to terminate the consideration of the petitions.
Article 383. Decisions to issue notices on search of
persons absent from their residence places
In case
of accepting a petition the Court shall issue a notice on search of a person
absent from his/her residence place. If a petition for the Court to take
necessary measures to manage the properties of the absent person is accepted,
the court’s decision to accept the petition must also decide on the application
of measures to manage the properties of such person according to the provisions
of the Civil Code.
Article 384. Notices on search of persons absent from their
residence places
A notice
on search of a person absent from his/her residence place must contain the
following principal contents:
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2. Name
of the Court that issues the notice;
3. Serial
number and date of the court’s decision to issue a notice on search of a person
absent from his/her residence place;
4. Full
name and address of the petitioner;
5. Full
name, date of birth or age of the person to be searched for and the address of
his/her latest residence place before his/her absence.
6.
Addresses of agencies, organizations and individuals for contacts by the person
to be searched for or other persons having information on the person to be
searched for.
Article 385. Announcement of notices on search of persons
absent from their residence places
1. Within
01 month from the day on which the Court issues decision to issue a notice on
search of a person absent from his/her residence place, such decision must be
posted on one of central dailies for three consecutive issues, e-portal of the
Court and/or People's Committee of province (if any) and broadcasted on the
central radio or television channels three times for 03 consecutive days.
2. All
expenses for the publication or broadcasting of notices on search of persons
absent from their residence places shall be borne by the petitioners.
Article 386. Effect of decisions on issuance of notices on
search of persons absent from their residence places
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Chapter XXVI
PROCEDURES FOR RESOLUTION OF PETITIONS FOR
DECLARING A PERSON MISSING
Article 387. Petition for declaring a person missing
1.
Persons with related rights and interests shall be entitled to request the
Court to declare a person missing under the provisions of the Civil Code.
2. The
petitions must be accompanied by materials and evidences to prove that the
persons who are requested to be declared missing have been absent for 02
consecutive years or more without reliable information on whether they are
still alive or dead and prove that the petitioners have taken sufficient
measures for search notices. In cases where the Courts have issued decisions on
notice on search of the persons absent from their residence places, copies of
such decisions must also be submitted.
Article 388. Preparation for consideration of petition for
declaring a person missing
1. Within
20 days as from the date of receiving a petition for declaring a person
missing, the Court shall issue a decision on a notice on search of the person
who is requested to be declared missing.
2. The
content of such a notice and the announcement of the notice shall comply with
the provisions of Articles 384 and 385 of this Code. The time limit for such a
search notice shall be 04 months from the day on which such notice is posted or
broadcasted for the first time.
3. Within
the time limit for announcing a notice, if the petitioner withdraws his/her
petition or the person who is requested to be declared missing returns and
requests the Court to stop considering the petition, the Court shall issue a
decision to terminate the consideration of the petition for declaring that
person missing.
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Article 389. Decision to declare a person missing
In case
of accepting a petition, the Court shall issue a decision declaring a person
missing. In cases where the Court is requested to take measures to manage
properties of the person who is declared missing and the request is accepted,
the decision declaring a person missing must also indicate specific measures to
be taken to manage properties of that person according to the provisions of the
Civil Code.
Article 390. Annulment of a decision to declare a person
missing
1. The
person who returns after being declared missing or persons with related rights
and interests is entitled to request the Court to annul the decisions to
declare a person missing as provided for in the Civil Code.
2. In
case of accepting a petition, the Court shall issue a decision to annul the
decision that has declared a person missing, deciding on the legal consequences
of the annulment of the decision declaring such person missing under the
provisions of the Civil Code.
Chapter XXVII
PROCEDURES FOR RESOLUTION OF PETITIONS FOR
DECLARING PERSONS DEAD
Article 391. Right to file petition for declaring a person
dead
1.
Persons with related rights and interests may request the Court to declare a
person dead according to the provisions of the Civil Code.
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Article 392. Preparation for consideration of petition for
declaring a person dead
1. Within
20 days as from the date of receiving a petition for declaring a person dead,
the Court shall issue a decision on a notice on search of the person who is
requested to be declared dead.
2. The
content of such a notice, the announcement of the notice and the time limit for
announcement shall comply with the provisions of Articles 2 and 388 of this
Code.
3. Within
the time limit for announcing a notice, if the petitioner withdraws his/her
petition or the person who is requested to be declared dead returns and notify
the Court, the Court shall issue a decision to terminate the consideration of
the petition for declaring that person dead.
4. Within
10 days from the day on which the time limit for announcement of notice
expires, the Court shall open a meeting to consider the petition.
Article 393. Decision to declare a person dead
In case
of accepting a petition, the Court shall issue a decision declaring a person dead.
In such decision, the Court shall determine the day on which that person died
and the legal consequences of declaring a person dead according to the
provisions of the Civil Code.
Article 394. Petitions to annul decisions that have
declared persons dead
1. In
cases where the person who is declared dead returns or where there is reliable
information affirming that such person is still alive, that person or persons
with related rights and interests may request the Court to issue decision to
annul the decision that has declared such person dead.
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Article 395. Decisions to annul decisions that have
declared persons dead
In case
of accepting a petition, the Court shall issue a decision to annul the decision
that has declared a person dead. In the latter decision, the Court must
determine the legal consequences of the annulment of the decision declaring a
person dead according to the provisions of the Civil Code.
Chapter XXVIII
PROCEDURES FOR RESOLUTION OF PETITIONS FOR
RECOGNITION OF VOLUNTARY DIVORCES AND AGREEMENTS ON CHILD CUSTODY AND PROPERTY
DIVISION UPON DIVORCES
Article 396. Petitions for recognition of voluntary
divorces and agreements on child custody and property division upon divorces
1. Any
person requesting for recognition of voluntary divorces and agreements on child
custody and property division upon divorces must submit petitions. A petition
must include information specified in clause 2 Article 362 of this Code.
2. Any
person requesting for recognition of voluntary divorces and agreements on child
custody and property division upon divorces must submit petitions. In such
cases, both husbands and wives shall be considered the petitioners.
3.
Enclosed with the petitions shall be materials and evidences proving that
agreements on voluntary divorces and agreements on child custody and property
division upon divorces are well-grounded and lawful.
Article 397. Mediation and recognition of voluntary
divorces and agreements on child custody and property division upon divorces
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2. Judges
must conduct mediations to unify husbands and wives; explain about rights and
obligations between wife and husband, parents and children and between members
of family and rights and obligations in providing alimonies and other matters
related to marriage and family.
3. If
after the mediations, the wives and the husbands decide to reunite, Judges
shall issue decisions to terminate the resolution of their petitions.
4. If the
mediations are not successful, the Judges shall make decisions to recognize the
voluntary divorces and agreements between involved parties as provided for in
Article 212 of this Code in the following conditions are fully satisfied:
a) The
two sides really volunteer to divorce;
b) The
two sides have reached agreements on whether or not to divide the common
properties, on the care, rearing and education of their children;
c) Such
agreements ensure the legitimate interests of the wives and their children.
5. If the
mediations for reunification are not successful and involved parties cannot
reach agreements about the division of properties and the care, rearing and education of
children, then the Courts shall terminate the settlement of civil matters
pertaining to recognition of voluntary divorces and agreements on child custody
and property division and accept the cases for resolution. The Courts are not
required to make notifications of the acceptance of the cases or to assign
other Judges to take charge of the cases. The settlement of the cases shall be
conducted according to common procedures prescribed in this Code.
Chapter XXIX
PROCEDURES FOR RESOLUTION OF PETITIONS FOR
DECLARATION OF NOTARIZED DOCUMENTS TO BE INVALID
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1.
Notaries who have carried out notarization, requesters for notarization,
witnesses, persons with related rights and interests and competent state
agencies may request Courts to declare notarized documents invalid when they
have grounds to believe that the notarization was performed against the law on
notarization.
2. A
petition for a Court to declare a notarized document invalid must contain the
details prescribed in Clause 2, Article 362
of this Code.
3.
Accompanying the petition for a Court to declare a notarized document invalid
must be materials and evidences to prove that such petition is well-grounded and lawful.
Article 399.
Preparation for consideration of petitions for declaration of notarized
documents to be invalid
1. The
time limit for preparing for consideration of a petition for declaration of a
notarized document to be invalid shall
be 01 month, counting from the day on which the
Court accepts such petition. Past this time limit, the Court shall issue a
decision to open a meeting to consider the petition.
2. After
accepting a petition for declaration of a notarized document to be invalid, the
competent Court shall immediately notify such to the notary bureau, notary
office or notary that has performed the notarization, notarization requester,
persons with related rights and interests, competent state agencies and same-level
procuracies.
3. Within
the time limit for preparing for consideration of a petition, if the petitioner
withdraws his/her petition, the Court shall issue a decision to terminate the
consideration of the petition.
4. Within
15
days after issuing a decision to open a meeting, the Court shall open the
meeting to consider the petition.
Article 400.
Decisions to declare notarized documents invalid
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2. In
case of accepting a petition, the Court shall issue a decision to declare a
notarized document invalid. In this decision the Court shall decide on legal
consequences of its declaration as prescribed by law.
Chapter XXX
PROCEDURES FOR RESOLUTION OF
PETITIONS FOR DECLARATION OF LABOR CONTRACTS/COLLECTIVE BARGAINING AGREEMENTS
TO BE INVALID
Article 401.
Petitions for declaration of a labor contract/collective bargaining agreement
to be invalid
1. Employees, employers, representative organizations
of employees’ collectives and competent
agencies may request competent Court
to declare a labor contract/collective
bargaining agreement to be invalid
when they have grounds provided for in the Labor Code.
2. A petition of an employee/employer/representative
organization of employees’ collective and a written request of competent agencies must
contain the details specified in clause 2 Article 362 of this Code.
Article 402.
Consideration of petitions for declaration of a labor contract/collective
bargaining agreement to be invalid
1. The time limit for preparing for consideration of a
petition for declaration of a labor contract to be invalid shall be 10 days,
declaration of a collective bargaining
agreement to be invalid, counting from
the day on which the Court accepts such petition. Past this time limit, the Court shall
issue a decision to open the meeting for considering the petition.
2. After accepting the petition for declaration of a
labor contract or a collective bargaining
agreement to be invalid, the Court
shall send the notification of acceptance to the petitioner, the employer, the employee collective’s representative organizations and the procuracy of the same level.
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4. Within
05 working days after issuing the decision to open a meeting, the Court shall open the
meeting to consider the petition for
declaration of a labor contract to be invalid.
Within 10
working days after issuing the decision to open a meeting, the Court shall open
the meeting to consider the petition for declaration of a collective bargaining
agreement to be invalid.
5. When considering the petition, the Judge may accept
or not accept the request for declaration of labor
contract or collective bargaining agreement to be invalid.
If
the request is accepted, the Judge shall issue a decision to declare the labor contract/collective bargaining agreement to be invalid. In this decision, the Judge shall settle the
legal consequence of the declaration of the labor
contract/collective bargaining agreement to be invalid.
6. The decision to declare a labor contract/collective bargaining agreement to be invalid must be sent to the petitioner or requester,
the employer, the employee
collective’s representative organization
and the labor affair authority of the area where the enterprise is
headquartered and labor affair authorities of the same level, applicable to
cases pertaining to enterprises do not have main headquarters in Vietnam.
Chapter XXXI
PROCEDURES FOR CONSIDERING THE
LEGITIMACY OF A STRIKE
Article 403. Requesting a Court to consider the legitimacy of a strike
1. During a strike or within 03 months from the day on
which the strike comes to an end, either the employer or the employee
collective’s representative organization
may request the Court to consider the legitimacy of a strike.
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a)
Details specified in clause 2 Article 362 of this Code;
b)
Name and address of the organization that led the strike;
c)
Name and address of the employer of the employees’ collective on strike.
3. The request must be enclosed with copies of the
decision to go on strike, decision or mediation record of a competent agency or
organization engaged in the settlement of the collective labor dispute,
materials and evidences related to the consideration of the legitimacy of the
strike.
Article 404.
Procedures for sending a written request to a Court for consideration of the
legitimacy of a strike
Procedures
for sending and receiving a written request and performing the obligation to
provide materials and evidences for a Court for the consideration and decision
on
the legitimacy of a strike at the Court shall be conformable to provisions of
this Code.
Article 405.
Jurisdiction to consider the legitimacy of a strike
1. The People’s Court
of province where the strike takes
place shall have the jurisdiction to consider the legitimacy of the strike.
2.
Collegial People’s Courts shall have
the jurisdiction to settle the appeals against the decisions of People’s Courts of
provinces on the legitimacy of the strikes within their territorial competence.
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1. A People’s Court
of province shall consider the
legitimacy of a strike through a panel comprised of 3 Judges.
2. A Collegial
People’s Court shalls settle an appeal
against a decision on the legitimacy of a strike through a panel comprised of
3 Judges.
Article 407.
Participants in a meeting for considering the legitimacy of a strike
1. The panel in charge of considering the legitimacy
of the strike chaired by one Judge; the Court clerk for recording the meeting
minute.
2.
Procurators of the procuracy of the
same level.
3. Representatives of the employee collective’s representative organization and the employer.
4. Representatives of other agencies and organizations
as requested by the Court.
Article 408.
Postponement of a meeting for considering the legitimacy of a strike
1. A meeting for
considering the legitimacy of a strike
shall be postponed according to regulations in Article 233 of this Code
provided for the postponement of a Court session.
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Article 409.
Termination of the consideration of the legitimacy of a strike
The
Court shall terminate the consideration of the
legitimacy of a strike in the
following cases:
1. The petitioner withdraw his/her petition;
2. Parties have reached agreement on the settlement of
the strike and request in writing to the Court for not settling the strike;
3. The petitioner is absent though has been duly
summoned twive, except for force majeure
events or objective obstacles.
Article 410.
Procedures for processing a written request for consideration of the legitimacy
of a strike
1. Upon the receipt of a petition, the Chief Justice
of People’s Court of province shall decide to establish a Panel to consider
the legitimacy of the strike and assign one Judge to take main charge of
settling such petition.
2. Within 05 working days from the day on which the
petition is received, the Judge assigned to presider over the settlement of the
petition must make a decision to hold a meeting for considering the legitimacy
of the strike. The deicision to hold a meeting for considering the legitimacy
of the strike must be immediately sent to the representative organization of
employees’ collective, the employerm the procuracy of the same level and relevant agencies and
organizations.
3. Within 05 working days from the day on which the
decision to hold a meeting for considering the legitimacy of a strike is
issued, the Panel in charge of considering the legitimacy of the strike must
hold a meeting for considering the legitimacy of the strike.
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1. The Judge presiding over the meeting for
considering the legitimacy of the strike announces the decision to hold a
meeting for considering the legitimacy of the strike and summarize the
petition.
2.
Representative of the employee collective’s representative organizations and
representative of the employer present
their opinions.
3. The Judge presiding the meeting for considering the
letigimacy of the strike may request representatives of agencies and
organizations participating in the meeting to express their opinions.
4. The procurator
presents opinions of the procuracies
about the consideration of the legitimacy of the strike.
Immediately
when the meeting finishes, the procurator shall send the opinions in writing to the Court
for recording in the civil-matter files.
5. The panel considering the legitimacy of the strike
discusses and makes decision under the
majority rule.
Article 412.
Decision on the legitimacy of a strike
1. A decision of the Court on the legitimacy of a
strike must clearly state the reason and grounds to conclude on the legitimacy
of the strike.
The
decision of the Court on the legitimacy of a strike must be publicly announced
at the meeting and must be immediately sent to the employee collective’s representative organization, the employer and the procuracy of the same level. The employees‘ collective and
the employer shall be responsible for implementing the decision of the Court
but may also file appeals and the procuracy may file appeals against such decision.
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Article 413.
Order and procedures for settling appeals against the decisions on the
legitimacy of a strike
1. Immediately when the appeallate petition or the
appeal decision against the legitimacy of a strike is received, the Collegial People’s Court shall request in writing the Court that has considered the
legitimacy of the strike to forward the files of the case to it for
consideration/settlement.
2. Within 03 working days from the day on which the
petition is received, the Court that has issued the decision on the legitimacy
of the strike must forward the case files to the Collegial People’s Court for
considering and settling.
3. Within 02 working days from the day on which the
case file is received, the Chief Justice of the Collegial
People’s Court shall make decisions to
formulate an Appellate Panel to consider the legitimacy of the strike and assign a
Judge to preside over the study of files.
Within 05
working days from the day on which the Collegial People’s Court receives the case files, the Appellate Panel shall
consider the appeal against the decision on the legitimacy of the strike.
The
decision of the Appeallate Panel on the legitimacy of the strike shall be the
final one.
Chapter
XXXII
PROCEDURES FOR RESOLUTION OF CIVIL MATTERS
RELATING TO COMMERCIAL ARBITRATION ACTIVITIES IN VIETNAM
Article 414. Civil matters relating to Vietnamese
commercial arbitration activities that fall under the jurisdiction of the court
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2.
Application, change or cancellation of provisional emergency measures.
3.
Annulment of arbitral award.
4.
Resolution of complaints against decisions of the arbitral tribunal about
invalid arbitration agreements, inexecutable arbitration agreements or
jurisdiction of arbitral tribunal.
5.
Collection of evidences.
6.
Summoning witnesses.
7.
Registration of arbitral award.
8. Other
civil matters prescribed by the legislation on Vietnamese commercial
arbitration.
Article 415. Resolving procedures
Procedures
for resolution of civil matters pertaining to Vietnamese commercial arbitration
activities shall comply with the provisions of the legislation on Vietnamese
commercial arbitration.
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PROCEDURES FOR
RECOGNITION OF SUCCESSFUL OUT-OF-COURT MEDIATION RESULTS
Article 416. Recognition of successful out-of-Court
mediation results
The
Court shall consider issuing the decision to recognize the result of an
out-of-Court mediation in a dispute between agencies, organizations and
individuals that is conducted by a competent agency, organization or individual
according to law regulations on mediation to be a successful mediation result.
Article 417. Conditions for recognition of successful
out-of-Court mediation result
1.
Parties of the mediation agreement have sufficient civil act capacity.
2.
Parties of the mediation agreement are persons who have rights and obligations
towards the mediation contents. If the successful mediation contents are
related to rights and obligations of a third party, such mediation must be
agreed by such party.
3. Either
or both parties file application to the Court for recognition of the mediation.
4.
Contents of the successful mediation are totally voluntary and are not contrary
to law, not contrary to social ethics nor for evasion of obligations towards
the State or the third party.
Article 418. Application for recognition of successful
out-of-Court mediation results
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An
application must contain the following principal details:
a) Those
specified in points a, b, c, dd, e and g clause 2 Article 362 of this Code;
b) Name
and address of individual/organization conducting the mediation;
c) The
contents of successful mediation agreement to be recognized by the Court.
2.
Enclosed with the application shall be documents about the successful mediation
result according to relevant law provisions.
Article 419. Procedures for recognition of successful
out-of-Court mediation results
1.
Procedures for receiving and processing a successful out-of-Court mediation
result shall comply with regulations specified in Article 363, 364 and 365 of
this Code.
2. The
time limit for preparing for consideration of an application shall be 15 days
from the day on which it is accepted by the Court; past this time limit, the
Court shall issue decisions to hold a meeting for considering the application.
The time
limit for opening a meeting for considering the application shall be 10 days
from the day on which the Court issues the decision to open the meeting.
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a) To
request the parties in the mediation and persons with relevant interests and
duties to express opinions about the request of the applicant for recognition
of successful mediation result and/or to clarify the request or supplement
materials if necessary;
b) To
request agencies, organizations or individuals having jurisdiction to conduct
mediation to supply the Court materials to serves as the basis for the
consideration of application of involved parties if it is deemed necessary.
Agencies,
organizations and individuals receiving the requests of the Court shall respond
within 05 working days from the day on which such requests are received.
4.
Participants in the meeting for consideration of the application and procedures
for consideration of the application shall comply with regulations in Article
367 and Article 369 of this Code.
5. The
Judge shall make decisions to recognize the successful out-of-Court mediation
result when conditions specified in Article 417 of this Code are fully
satisfied. A decision of the Court must contain the details specified in
Article 370 of this Code.
6. The
Judge shall make decisions to not recognize the successful out-of-Court
mediation result when conditions specified in Article 417 of this Code are not
fully satisfied.
The
refusal to recognize the successful out-of-Court mediation result shall not
affect the contents and legal value of such out-of-Court mediation result.
7. The
decision to recognize or to not recognize a successful out-of-Court mediation
result shall be sent to the parties of the mediation agreement, persons with
relevant interests and duties and the procuracy of the same level.
8. The
decision to recognize or to not recognize a successful out-of-Court mediation
result shall immediately take effect and shall not be appealed against
according to appellate procedures.
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Chapter XXXIV
PROCEDURES FOR SETTLEMENT OF CIVIL MATTERS
RELATED TO THE ARREST OF AIRCRAFTS OR SEAGOING VESSELS
Article 420. Right to request the Court to arrest an
aircraft or a seagoing vessel
1. Any
agencies, organizations or individuals shall be entitled to request the Court
to arrest an aircraft at an airport or an airfield to ensure the benefits of
the creditor, owner or the third party who suffer damage on the surface or
other people with rights and interests towards the aircraft or to enforce a
civil judgment according to law regulations on Vietnam’s civil aviation.
2. Any
agencies, organizations or individuals may request the Court to arrest a
seagoing vessel to ensure the settlement of maritime complaints to enforce a
civil judgment or to provide Judicial assistance.
Article 421. Jurisdiction of the Court to arrest an
aircraft or a seagoing vessel
1. The
People’s Court of province where is the location of the airport/airfield where
the aircraft which is requested to be arrested landed shall have jurisdiction
to make a decision to arrest such aircraft.
2. The
People’s Court of province where is the location of the seaport/inland port
where the seagoing vessel which is requested to be arrested is operating shall
have the jurisdiction to make a decision to arrest such vessel. If such seaport
is comprised of multiple wharves that are located in multiple provinces and
central-affiliated cities, the People’s Court of province where is the location
of the wharf where the seagoing vessel which is requested to be arrested is
operating shall have the jurisdiction to make a decision to arrest such vessel.
Article 422. Procedures for arresting aircrafts or seagoing
vessels
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PART SEVEN
PROCEDURES FOR RECOGNITION AND ENFORCEMENT
IN VIETNAM OR NON-RECOGNITION OF CIVIL JUDGMENTS OR DECISIONS OF FOREIGN
COURTS; RECOGNITION AND ENFORCEMENT OF FOREIGN ARBITRAL AWARD
Chapter XXXV
GENERAL REGULATIONS ON PROCEDURES FOR
RECOGNITION AND ENFORCEMENT IN VIETNAM OR NON-RECOGNITION OF CIVIL JUDGMENTS OR
DECISIONS OF FOREIGN COURTS; RECOGNITION AND ENFORCEMENT OF FOREIGN ARBITRAL
AWARD
Article 423. Foreign courts’ civil judgments or decisions
which shall be recognized and enforced in Vietnam
1. The
following foreign courts’ civil judgments/decisions shall be recognized and
enforced in Vietnam:
a) Civil,
marriage, family, trade, business, labor – related judgments/decisions,
decisions on properties in criminal/administrative judgments/decisions of
Courts of a foreign country are provided for in International treaty to which
both Vietnam and such country are signatories;
b) Civil,
marriage, family, trade, business, labor – related judgments/decisions;
decisions on properties in criminal/administrative judgments/decisions of
Courts of a foreign country which does not sign an International treaty with
Vietnam that contains regulations on recognition and enforcement of judgments
and decisions of foreign Courts on the basis of principle of reciprocity;
c) Other
judgments or decisions of foreign courts, which are recognized and enforced
under Vietnamese law.
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Article 424. Foreign arbitrators’ award which shall be
recognized and enforced in Vietnam
1. The
following foreign arbitrators’ award shall be considered being recognized and
enforced in Vietnam:
a)
Arbitral award of a foreign country which is a signatory to an International
treaty about recognition and enforcement of foreign arbitral award together
with Vietnam;
b)
Foreign arbitral award other than those specified in point a of this clause on
the basis of principle of reciprocity.
2.
Foreign arbitral award specified in clause 1 of this Article shall be
considered being recognized and enforced in Vietnam shall be the final ones of the
arbitral tribunal that resolve all the contents of the dispute, finish the
arbitral procedures and are effective.
3.
Foreign arbitral, foreign arbitral award provided for in clause 1 of this
Article shall be determined according to provisions of Vietnamese Law on
commercial arbitration.
Article 425. Right to apply for recognition and enforcement
or non-recognition of civil judgments or decisions of foreign courts;
recognition and enforcement of foreign arbitral award
1. The
judgment creditors or their lawful representatives may file petitions with
Vietnamese Courts for recognition and enforcement of civil judgments or
decisions of foreign Courts or foreign arbitral award if the judgment debtors
being individuals reside or work in Vietnam, or the judgment debtors being
agencies or organizations are headquartered in Vietnam or their properties
related to the enforcement of the judgments or decisions of foreign Courts or
foreign arbitral award exist in Vietnam at the time when the applications are
filed.
2.
Judgment debtors or their lawful representatives may request the Vietnamese
Courts to refuse to recognize the civil judgments/decisions of foreign Courts.
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Article 426. Ensuring the right to appeal
The
involved parties shall be entitled to appeal and People’s Procuracies of
provinces and the Supreme People’s Procuracy shall be entitled to appeal against
Court decisions to recognize and enforce or not recognize civil judgments or
decisions of foreign Courts or decisions to recognize and enforce foreign
arbitral award to request Collegial People’s Court to review under the
provisions of this Code.
Article 427. Ensuring the effect of the decisions of
Vietnam’s Courts on recognition and enforcement or non-recognition of civil
judgments/decisions of foreign Courts; recognition and enforcement of foreign
arbitrators’ award
1. A
civil judgment/decision of a foreign Court recognized and enforced in Vietnam
by a Vietnamese Court shall be legally effective as a legally effective civil
judgment/decision of a Vietnamese Court and shall be enforced according to
procedures for enforcement of a civil judgment. Any civil judgment/decision of
a foreign Court that has not been recognized by a Vietnamese Court shall not be
legally effective in Vietnam, except for cases where such judgment/decision is
automatically recognized as provided for in Article 431 of this Code.
2. Any
award of a foreign arbitrator that is recognized and enforced in Vietnam shall
be legally effective like an effective decision of Vietnamese Court and shall
be enforced according to procedures for enforcement of a civil judgment.
3. A
civil judgment/decision of a foreign Court or the award of a foreign arbitrator
shall be enforced in Vietnam only when the decision of Vietnamese Court to
recognize and enforce such civil judgment/decision and/or award takes legal
effect.
Article 428. Sending the decisions of Vietnam’s Courts on
recognition and enforcement or on non-recognition of civil judgments/decisions of
foreign Courts; recognition and enforcement of foreign arbitrators’ award
The Court
shall be responsible for sending directly or by post or through the Ministry of
Justice its decision to the creditors and debtors of the civil
judgment/decision of the foreign Court and/or the award of the foreign
arbitrator or their lawful representatives, the procuracy and civil
judgment-executing bodies according to provisions of this Code.
Article 429.
Ensuring the right to send money and properties from the enforcement of civil
judgments/decisions of foreign Courts or foreign arbitrators’ award
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Article 430. Fees and charges for consideration of
application for recognition and enforcement or non-recognition of civil
judgments/decisions of foreign Courts; recognition and enforcement of foreign
arbitrators’ award
1. Any
person requesting a Vietnam’s Court to recognize and enforce or to not
recognize in Vietnam a civil judgment/decision of a foreign Court; or to
recognize and enforce a foreign arbitrator’s award must pay fees according to
Vietnam’s law.
2.
Requesters specified in clause 1 of this Article must bear the cost of delivery
to foreign countries the procedural documents of Vietnamese Courts that are
relevant to their requests.
Article 431. Civil judgments/decisions of foreign Courts,
decisions of other foreign competent agencies that are automatically recognized
in Vietnam
1. Civil
judgments/decisions of foreign Courts and decisions of other foreign competent
agencies which are not requested to be enforced or recognized in Vietnam
specified in an International treaty to which the Socialist Republic of Vietnam
is a signatory.
2.
Judgments/decisions pertaining to marriage and family of foreign Courts,
decisions on marriage and family of other competent agencies of countries which
are not the co-signatories to an International treaty with Vietnam that are not
requested to be enforced or recognized in Vietnam.
Chapter XXXVI
PROCEDURES FOR CONSIDERATION OF
APPLICATIONS FOR RECOGNITION AND ENFOREMENT IN VIETNAM OF CIVIL JUDGMENTS OR
DECISIONS OF FOREIGN COURTS; PROCEDURES FOR CONSIDERATION OF APPLICATION FOR
NON-RECOGNITION OF CIVIL JUDGMENTS OR DECISIONS OF FOREIGN COURTS
Section 1. PROCEDURES FOR CONSIDERATION OF APPLICATIONS FOR
RECOGNITION AND ENFORCEMENT IN VIETNAM OF CIVIL JUDGMENTS OR DECISIONS OF
FOREIGN COURTS
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1. Within
03 years from the day on which the civil judgment/decision of a foreign Court
takes legal effect, the judgment/decision creditors, persons with relevant
legitimate rights and interests or their lawful representatives may submit
their application to Vietnam’s Ministry of Justice according to provisions of
International treaty to which the Socialist Republic of Vietnam and home
country of such foreign Court are co-signatories or to a competent Vietnam’s
Court specified in this Code to request recognition and enforcement in Vietnam
of such civil judgment/decision.
2. In
cases where the applicant can prove that he/she cannot submit the application
within the time limit specified in clause 1 of this Article due to a force
majeure event or an objective obstruct, the time periods when such force
majeure event or objective obstruct occurs shall not be included in the time
limit for submission of application.
Article 433. Applications for recognition and enforcement
1. An
application for recognition and enforcement must contain the following
principal details:
a) Full
names and addresses of residence places or work places of the judgment
creditors or their lawful representatives; if the judgment creditors are
agencies or organizations, the full names and addresses of their head-offices
must be fully inscribed;
b) Full
names and addresses of residence places or work places of the judgments
debtors; if the judgments debtors are agencies or organizations, the full names
and addresses of their head-offices must be fully inscribed; in cases where the
judgment debtors being individuals do not have residence places or work places
in Vietnam or the judgment debtors being agencies or organizations do not have
head-offices in Vietnam, their applications must also specify the addresses of
the places where exist the properties and assorted properties relating to the
enforcement in Vietnam of foreign courts’ civil judgments/decisions;
c)
Requests of judgment creditors; where foreign courts’ judgments/decisions have
been partly enforced, the judgment creditors must clearly state the executed
parts and the remaining parts requested for recognition and continued
enforcement in Vietnam.
2.
Applications in foreign languages must be enclosed with their Vietnamese
versions which are duly notarized or authenticated.
Article 434. Papers and documents enclosed with the
applications
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a)
Originals or certified true copies of the judgment/decision issued by the
foreign Court;
b)
Documents made by the foreign Court or other competent foreign agencies
certifying that such judgment/decision has taken legal effect, has not expired
and should be enforced in Vietnam, except where these details have already been
clearly stated in the judgment/decision;
c)
Documents made by the foreign Court or other competent foreign agencies
certifying the lawful delivery of such judgment/decision to the judgment
debtors who have to execute such judgments/decisions;
d) In
cases the foreign Court issue the judgment in the absence of the judgment
debtors or their lawful representatives, documents made by the foreign Court or
other competent foreign agencies certifying that they have been duly summoned
are required.
2. Papers
and documents enclosed with the application that are in foreign languages must
be enclosed with their Vietnamese versions which are duly notarized or
authenticated.
Article 435. Transferring of dossiers to Courts
Within 05
working days after receiving the applications, papers and documents specified
in clause 1 Article 434 of this Code, the Ministry of Justice must send the
dossiers to competent Courts as provided for in Articles 37 and 39 of this
Code.
Article 436. Acceptance of dossiers
Within 05
working days from the day on which the dossiers sent from the Ministry of
Justice are received or from the day on which the applications and accompanying
papers and documents sent from the applicants are received, the Courts shall
base themselves on Article 363, 364 and 365 of this Code to consider and accept
the dossiers and notify such to the applicants, the judgment debtors or their
lawful representatives in Vietnam, the Procuracies of the same levels and the
Ministry of Justice.
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1. Within
the term of preparation for consideration of an application, the Court may
request the judgment creditors to explain unclear matters in the application;
request the foreign Court issuing the judgment/decision to explain unclear
matters in the dossier.
2. The
written request of the Court for explanation shall be sent to the judgment
creditors or their lawful representatives in Vietnam and the foreign Court by
post.
If the
Vietnamese Court request the foreign Court to make explanation, the written
request shall be translated in to the language specified in the International
treaty to which the Socialist Republic of Vietnam is a signatory. If the
Socialist Republic of Vietnam and the foreign country have not been the
co-signatories to an International treaty, the dossier must be enclosed with
the versions in the language of the country that is requested Judicial
assistance or in a language agreed by the requested country. Applicants for
recognition and enforcement in Vietnam of judgments/decisions of foreign
countries must bear the cost for translation and the postage on the written
request for explanation of Vietnam’s Courts to the foreign Courts.
3. Time
limit for preparation for consideration of an application shall be 04 months
from the day on which it is accepted. Within such time limit, on a case-by-case
basis, the Court shall issue one of the following decisions:
a) To
suspend the consideration of the application;
b) To
terminate the consideration of the application;
c) To
open a meeting for considering the application.
If a
written request for explanation is sent by the Court as provided for in clause
1 of this Article, time limit for consideration of the application may be
extended by not exceeding 02 months. Past such time limit, if the written
explanation of the involved parties or the foreign Court has not been received
by the Vietnam’s Court, Vietnam’s Court shall base itself on the documents in
the dossier to resolve the application of the involved parties.
Within 01
days after issuing a decision to open a meeting for considering the
application, the Court shall open the meeting.
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4. The
Court shall issue the decision to suspend the consideration of the application
in any of the following circumstances:
a) The
judgment debtor being individual has died or the judgment debtor being agency/organization
has been merged, amalgamated, divided or dissolved without an agency,
organization or individual to inherit his/her/its procedural rights and
obligations;
b) The
judgment debtor being individual lacks of legal capacity but his/her lawful
representatives has not been determined;
c) Legal
representation of the judgment debtor has finished but the replacing person has
not been assigned;
d) The
enforcement of the judgment/decision has been suspended at the home country of
the Court issuing such judgment/decision;
dd) Such
judgment/decision is being re-considered or being waited for re-consideration
according to procedures of the home country of the Court issuing such
judgment/decision.
5. The
Court shall issue the decision to terminate the consideration of the application in any of the
following circumstances:
a)
The judgment creditor withdraw his/her application or the judgment debtor has
voluntarity enforce the judgment/decision of the foreign Court;
b)
The judgment debtor being individual has died but his/her rights and
obligations have not been inherited;
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d) The
judgment debtor being agency/organization has been dissolved or bankrupted but
its procedural rights and obligations have not been inherited;
dd) The
decision of the Court to open the bankrupt procedures for the judgment debtor
has been issued;
e) The
Court cannot determine the address of the judgment debtor and the place exists
the properties related to the enforcement;
g) The
jurisdiction to resolve the
application belongs to another Court and the dossier has been forwarded to such
Court for resolution;
h)
The Court cannot determine the place exists the properties related to the
enforcement in Vietnam in case the judgment
debtor being agency/organization does not have head office in Vietnam or the
judgment debtor being individual does not reside or work in Vietnam.
Article 438. Meetings for considering applications
1. The
consideration of an application shall be conducted at a meeting by a Panel
consisting of 3 Judges, one of whom shall act as the presiding Judge under the
assignment of the Chief Justice of the Court.
2. The
procurator of the procuracy of the same level shall attend the meeting; if the
procurator is absent, the meeting shall be still conducted by the Court.
3. The
meeting shall be conducted in the presence of the judgment creditors, judgment
debtors or their lawful representatives; if any of them is absent for the first
time, the meeting must be postponed.
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The Panel
shall issue decisions to terminate the consideration of the application if the
judgment creditors or their lawful representatives have been duly summoned
twice but are still absent or in any of the circumstances specified in clause 5
Article 437 of this Code.
4. When
considering the application for recognition and enforcement, the Panel shall
not conduct re-trial over the case when a foreign Court has issued
judgment/decision for such case. The Court shall be only entitled to check and
compare the civil judgment/decision of the foreign Court and accompanying
papers and documents with provisions of Chapter XXXV and Chapter XXXVI of this
Code, other relevant Vietnam's law provisions and International treaties to
which the Socialist Republic of Vietnam is a signatory to form the basis for
the issuance of decision to recognize and enforce such judgment/decision.5.
After checking the application and accompanying papers and documents and
listening to opinions of the summoned people and of the procurator, the Panel
shall discuss and make decision under the majority rule.
The Panel
shall be entitled to make a decision to recognize and enforce in Vietnam or
decision to not recognize a civil judgment/decision of a foreign Court.
6. Within
the time for preparation of the application, the first-instance Court shall be
entitled to decide to apply, modify or repeal a provisional emergency measure
specified in Chapter VIII of this Code.
Article 439. Civil judgments/decisions of foreign Court
that shall not be recognized or enforced in Vietnam
1. Civil
judgments/decisions of foreign Courts that do not satisfy one of conditions for
being recognized provided for in International treaties to which the Socialist
Republic of Vietnam is a signatory.
2. Civil
judgments/decisions that have not taken legal effect as provided for in law of
the home countries of the Courts issuing them.
3.
Judgment debtors or their lawful representatives are absent from the Court
sessions of the foreign Courts because they have not been duly summoned or documents
of the foreign Courts have not been delivered to them in a reasonable time
period as prescribed in law of home country of such foreign Court so that such
persons can exercise the right to self-defense.
4. The
foreign Courts that have issued the judgments/decisions do not have
jurisdiction to settle civil cases as prescribed in Article 440 of this Code.
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6. Time
limit for enforcement of judgments prescribed in law of the home countries of
the Courts issuing such judgments/decisions or in Vietnam's law on civil
judgment enforcement has been exceeded.
7. The
enforcement of the judgments/decisions has been canceled or terminated at the
home country of the Court issuing such judgments/decisions.
8. The
recognition and enforcement of civil judgments/decisions of foreign Courts in
Vietnam are contrary to basic principles of law of the Socialist Republic of
Vietnam.
Article 440. Foreign Courts having jurisdiction to settle
disputes and requests
Any
foreign Court issuing a judgment/decision that is being considered to be
recognized and enforced in Vietnam shall have jurisdiction to settle the civil
case in the following cases:
1. The
civil case does not fall within the exclusive jurisdiction of Vietnam’s Courts
specified in Article 470 of this Code;
2. The
civil case falls in a case specified in Article 469 of this Code but has one of
the following conditions:
a) The
defendant participate in oral argument without appeal against the jurisdiction
of such foreign Court;
b) Not
any judgment/decision issued by a third country for such civil case is
recognized and enforced by Vietnam’s Court;
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Article 441. Sending of decisions of Courts
1. Within
15 days from the day on which the decision specified in clause 5 Article 438 of
this Code is issued, the Court shall send such to involved parties or their
lawful representatives, the Ministry of Justice and the procuracy of the same
level.
2. Within
05 working days from the day on which the decision to suspend or terminate the
resolution of the application provided for in clauses 4 and 5 Article 437 of
this Code is issued, the Court shall send such decision to involved parties or
their lawful representatives, the Ministry of Justice and the procuracy of the
same level.
3.
Immediately when decisions to apply, modify or cancel a provisional emergency
measure specified in clause 6 Article 438 of this Code is issued, the Court
shall send such decision to involved parties or their lawful representatives,
competent civil-judgment-executing bodies, the Ministry of Justice and the
procuracy of the same level.
4. The
sending of decisions of the Court to involved parties living overseas shall
comply with methods specified in Article 474 of this Code.
Article 442. Appeals
1. Within
07 days from the day on which the Court issue the decision to suspend/terminate
the consideration of the application, and 15 days from the day on which the
Court issue the decision to recognize and enforce or to not recognize the
judgment/decision of a foreign Court, involved parties and their lawful representatives
may file an appeal against such decision; if the involved parties and their
lawful representatives did not attend the meeting for considering the
application, the time limit for filing an appeal shall be counted from the day
on which they receive such decision. The appellate petition must clearly state
the reasons for the appeal and the appellate requests.
In cases
where there are force majeure events or objective obstacles that the involved
parties or their lawful representatives can not file an appeal within such time
limit, the time when the force majeure events or objective obstacles occur
shall not be included in the time limit for appeal.
2. The
Chairpersons of the People’s Procuracies of provinces or Chairpersons of the
Collegial People’s Procuracies may file appeals against the decisions of Courts
specified in clauses 4 and 5 Article 437 and clause 5 Article 438 of this Code.
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Article 443. Consideration of appeals
1.
Collegial People’s Court shall consider the decision of the People’s Court of
province which is appealed against within its jurisdiction within 01 month from
the day on which the documents are received; if explanation is required as
prescribed in clauses 1 and 2 Article 437 of this Code, such time limit shall
be extended for not exceeding 02 months.
2.
Members of the Panel in charge of considering a decision that is appealed
against shall be comprised of 3 Judges, one of which shall be the presiding
Judge as assigned by the Chief Justice of Collegial People’s Court.
A meeting
for re-considering a decision that is appealed against shall be conducted as
the one for considering the application specified in Article 438 of this Code.
3. The
Panel for considering the decision being appealed against shall have the
following powers:
a) To
uphold the decision of the first-instance Court;
b) To
modify partially of wholly the decision of the first-instance Court;
c) To
suspend the settlement of the appeal;
d) To
terminate the settlement of the appeal;
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e) To
repeal the decision of first-instance Court and terminate the consideration of
the application when existing any of circumstances specified in clause 5
Article 437 of this Code.
4. A
decision of a Collegial People’s Court shall take legal effect from the day on
which it is issued and may be appealed according to cassation or reopening
procedures according to provisions of this Code.
Section 2. PROCEDURES FOR CONSIDERATION OF APPLICATIONS FOR
NON-RECOGNITION OF CIVIL JUDGMENTS OR DECISIONS OF FOREIGN COURTS
Section 444. Prescriptive periods for application for
non-recognition in Vietnam of civil judgments/decisions of foreign Court
1. Within
03 years from the day on which the civil judgment/decision of a foreign Court
takes legal effect, the judgment debtors or their lawful representatives may
request Vietnam’s Court to not recognize such civil judgment/decision.
2. In
cases where the applicant can prove that he/she cannot submit the application
within the time limit specified in clause 1 of this Article due to a force
majeure event or an objective obstruct, the time periods when such force
majeure event or objective obstruct occurs shall not be included in the time
limit for submission of application.
Section 445. Application for non-recognition in Vietnam of
civil judgments/decisions of foreign Court
1. The
applicant specified in clause 1 Article 444 of this Code must file an
application. Such application must contain the following principal details:
a) Full
names and addresses of residence places or work places of the judgments
debtors; if the judgments debtors are agencies or organizations, the full names
and addresses of their head-offices must be fully inscribed; in cases where the
judgment debtors being individuals do not have residence places or work places
in Vietnam or the judgment debtors being agencies or organizations do not have
head-offices in Vietnam, their applications must also specify the addresses of
the places where exist the properties and assorted properties relating to the
enforcement in Vietnam of foreign courts’ civil judgments/decisions;
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c)
Requests of judgment debtors; where foreign courts’ judgments/decisions have
been partly enforced, the application must clearly state the executed parts and
the remaining parts requested for non-recognition in Vietnam.
2.
Applications in foreign languages must be enclosed with their Vietnamese
versions which are duly notarized or authenticated.
Section 446. Application for non-recognition in Vietnam of
civil judgments/decisions of foreign Court
1. The
applications shall be enclosed with papers and documents specified in the
International treaties to which the Socialist Republic of Vietnam is a
signatory. If the Socialist Republic of Vietnam and the home country of the
Court issuing the judgment/decision have not been co-signatories of an
International treaty having provisions for such matter, the application shall
be enclosed with the originals or certified true copy of the judgment/decision
issued by the foreign Court and papers and documents proving the request for
non-recognition.
2. Papers
and documents enclosed with the application that are in foreign languages must
be enclosed with their Vietnamese versions which are duly notarized or
authenticated.
3.
Procedures for consideration of the application, the sending of decision of the
Court, the filing of appeals and the consideration of the appeals shall be
conducted according to regulations in corresponding articles in Section 1 of
this Chapter.
Section 3. PROCEDURES FOR NON-RECOGNITION OF CIVIL
JUDGMENTS OR DECISIONS OF FOREIGN COURTS WHICH ARE NOT REQUESTED TO BE ENFORCED
IN VIETNAM
Section 447. Prescriptive periods for application for
non-recognition of civil judgments or decisions of foreign Courts which are not
requested to be enforced in Vietnam
1. Within
06 months from the day on which the civil judgment/decision of a foreign Court
takes legal effect but there is no request for enforcement of such
Judgment/decision in Vietnam, then involved parties and persons with relevant
legitimate rights and interests or their lawful representatives may submit
their application to Vietnam’s Ministry of Justice according to provisions of
International treaty to which the Socialist Republic of Vietnam and home
country of such foreign Court are co-signatories or to a competent Vietnam’s
Court specified in this Code, in case the International treaty to which the
Socialist Republic of Vietnam is a signatory does not provide for or there is
no relevant International treaty provisions, to request the Court to not
recognize such civil judgment/decision.
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Section 448. Application for non-recognition of civil
judgments or decisions of foreign Courts which are not requested to be enforced
in Vietnam
1. An
application for non-recognition of a civil judgment/decision of a foreign Court
which is not requested to be enforced in Vietnam must have the following
principal details:
a) Full
names and addresses of residence places or work places of the applicants; if
the applicants are agencies or organizations, the full names and addresses of
their head-offices must be fully inscribed;
b)
Requests of the applicants.
2.
Enclosed with the application shall be the originals or certified true copies
of the civil judgment/decision of foreign Court and necessary papers and
documents for proving that the request for unrecognition is well-grounded and
lawful.
3. The
application and accompanying papers and documents that are in foreign languages
must be enclosed with their Vietnamese versions which are duly notarized or
authenticated.
Section 449. Procedures for acceptance and processing of
application for non-recognition of a civil judgment/decision of a foreign Court
which is not requested to be enforced in Vietnam
1. The
acceptance of application, the preparation for consideration of application and
the meeting for considering the application for non-recognition of a civil
judgment/decision of a foreign Court which is not requested to be enforced in
Vietnam shall be conducted according to regulations in Articles 436, 437 and
438 of this Code.
2. The
Panel considering the application may any of the following decisions:
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b) To
reject the application for non-recognition.
3. A
civil judgment/decision of a foreign Court which is not requested to be
enforced in Vietnam shall not be recognized in cases specified in Article 439
of this Code.
Article 450. Sending decisions of Courts and regulations on
appeal
The
sending of decisions of Courts; the appeal and the consideration of an appeal
shall comply with regulations in Article 441, 442 and 443 of this Code.
Chapter XXXVII
PROCEDURES FOR CONSIDERATION OF
APPLICATIONS FOR RECOGNITION AND ENFORCEMENT IN VIETNAM OF FOREIGN ARBITRATOR’S
AWARD
Article 451. Time limit for submission of applications for
recognition and enforcement
1. Within
03 years from the day on which the foreign arbitrator’s award takes legal
effect, the judgment creditors and persons with relevant legitimate rights and
interests or their lawful representatives may submit their application to
Vietnam’s Ministry of Justice according to provisions of International treaty
to which the Socialist Republic of Vietnam is a signatory or to a competent
Vietnam’s Court specified in this Code, in case the International treaty to which
the Socialist Republic of Vietnam is a signatory does not provide for or there
is no relevant International treaty provisions, to request the Court to not
recognize and enforce such award.
2. In
cases where the applicant can prove that he/she cannot submit the application
within the time limit specified in clause 1 of this Article due to a force
majeure event or an objective obstruct, the time period when such force majeure
event or objective obstruct occurs shall not be included in the time limit for submission
of application.
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1. An
application for recognition and enforcement in Vietnam of foreign arbitrator’
award must contain the following principal details:
a) Full
names and addresses of residence places or work places of the judgment
creditors or their lawful representatives in Vietnam; if the judgment creditors
are agencies or organizations, the full names and addresses of their
head-offices must be fully inscribed;
b) Full
names and addresses of residence places or work places of the judgments
debtors; if the judgments debtors are agencies or organizations, the full names
and addresses of their head-offices must be fully inscribed; in cases where the
judgment debtors being individuals do not have residence places or work places
in Vietnam or the judgment debtors being agencies or organizations do not have
head-offices in Vietnam, their applications must also specify the addresses of
the places where exist the properties and assorted properties relating to the
enforcement in Vietnam of foreign arbitrator’s award;
c)
Requests of the judgment creditors.
2.
Applications in foreign languages must be enclosed with their Vietnamese
versions which are duly notarized or authenticated.
Article 453. Papers and documents enclosed with the
applications
1. The
applications shall be enclosed with papers and documents specified in the
International treaties to which the Socialist Republic of Vietnam is a
signatory; in case where there is no International treaty or the International
treaty does not provide for the case, the following papers and documents shall
be enclosed with the application:
a) The
originals or certified true copies of the foreign arbitrator’s award;
b) The
originals or certified true copies of arbitration agreements between parties.
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Article 454. Forwarding dossiers to Courts
1. Within
05 working days from the day on which the application and enclosed papers and
documents specified in Article 453 of this Code, the Ministry of Justice shall
forward them to the competent Court.
2. If the
Ministry of Justice has forwarded the dossier to the Court and received
notification from a competent agency of the foreign country informing that the
case is being considered or the enforcement of the foreign arbitrator’s award
has been canceled or terminated in such country, the Ministry of Justice must
immediately notify in writing to the Court.
Article 455. Acceptance of dossiers
Within 05
working days from the day on which the dossiers sent from the Ministry of
Justice are received or from the day on which the applications and accompanying
papers and documents sent from the applicants are received, the competent
Courts shall base themselves on Article 363, 364 and 365 of this Code to
consider and accept the dossiers and notify in writing such to the judgment
creditors, the judgment debtors or their lawful representatives in Vietnam, the
Procuracies of the same levels and the Ministry of Justice.
Article 456. Forwarding dossiers to other Courts,
settlement of disputes about jurisdiction
If after
accepting the case, the Courts deem that the settlement of application for
recognition and enforcement in Vietnam the foreign arbitrator’s award falls
within the jurisdiction of another Courts of Vietnam, then the Court which has
accepted the case shall issue a decision to forward the dossier to the
jurisdictional Court and cross out such request on its acceptance book. Such
decision shall be immediately sent to the procuracy of the same level and the
involved parties.
Involved
parties may file an appeal or the procuracy may file an appeal against such
decision within 03 working days from the day on which such decision is
received. Order and procedures for processing the appeals or settling disputes
about jurisdiction shall comply with regulations in Article 41 of this Code.
Article 457. Preparation for consideration of applications
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a) To
suspend the consideration of the application;
b) To
terminate the consideration of the application;
c) To
open a meeting for considering the application.
Within
the time limit for preparation for considering the application, the Court may
request the judgment creditors to explain the unclear information in the
application. In such case, the time limit for preparation for considering the
application shall be extended for not exceeding 02 months.
Within 20
days after issuing a decision to open a meeting for considering the
application, the Court shall open the meeting. Within 15 days before the
meeting is opened, the Court shall transfer the dossier to the procuracy of the
same level for study; past such time period, the procuracy shall return the
dossier to the Court so that the meeting for considering the application can be
opened.
2. The
Court shall issue the decision to suspend the consideration of the application
in any of the following circumstances:
a)
Foreign arbitrator’s award is being re-considered by a competent agency of the
country where the award is made;
b) The
judgment debtor being individual has died or the judgment debtor being
agency/organization has been merged, amalgamated, divided or dissolved without
an agency, organization or individual to inherit his/her/its procedure rights
and obligations;
c) The
judgment debtor being individual lacks of legal capacity but his/her lawful
representatives has not been determined;
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When the
decision to suspend the resolution of the application has been issued as
prescribed in this clause, the Judge shall be responsible for supervising and
expediting agencies, organizations and individuals to eliminate the causes for
such suspension as soon as possible to promptly continue processing the
application. When the causes for the suspension no longer exist, the Judge
shall make a decision to continue processing the application.
3. The
Court shall issue the decision to terminate the consideration of the
application in any of the following circumstances:
a) The
judgment creditor withdraws his/her application or the judgment debtor has
voluntarily enforce the foreign arbitrator’s award;
b) The
judgment debtor being individual has died but his/her rights and obligations
have not been inherited;
c) The
judgment debtor being agency/organization has been dissolved or bankrupted but
its rights and obligations have been settled according to Vietnam’s law;
d) The
judgment debtor being agency/organization has been dissolved or bankrupted but
its procedure rights and obligations have not been inherited;
dd) The
Court cannot determine the places where exist properties in Vietnam of the
judgment debtor according to the request of the judgment creditor of the
arbitral award.
Article 458. Meetings for considering applications
1. The
consideration of an application shall be conducted at a meeting by a Panel
consisting of 3 Judges, one of whom shall act as the presiding Judge under the
assignment of the Chief Justice of the Court.
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3. The
meeting shall be conducted in the presence of the judgment creditors, judgment
debtors or their lawful representatives; if any of them is absent for the first
time with plausible reasons, the meeting must be postponed.
The
consideration of the application shall still proceed if the judgment creditors
or their lawful representatives, or the judgment debtors or their lawful
representatives have filed their applications to the Courts for consideration
of the applications in their absence or if their lawful representatives have
been duly summoned twice but are still absent.
The Panel
shall issue decisions to terminate the processing of the application if the
judgment creditors or their lawful representatives have been duly summoned
twice but are still absent or in any of the circumstances specified in clause 3
Article 457 of this Code.
4. When
considering the application for recognition and enforcement, the Panel shall
not conduct re-trial over the dispute when the foreign arbitrator’s award has
been issued. The Court shall be only entitled to check and compare the foreign
arbitrator’s award and accompanying papers and documents with provisions of
Chapter XXXV and Chapter XXXVII of this Code, other relevant Vietnam's law
provisions and International treaties to which the Socialist Republic of
Vietnam is a signatory to form the basis for the issuance of decision to
recognize and enforce such award.
5. After
checking the application and accompanying papers and documents and listening to
opinions of the summoned people and of the procurator, the Panel shall discuss
and make decision under the majority rule.
The Panel
shall be entitled to make a decision to recognize and enforce in Vietnam the
foreign arbitrator’s award or decision to not recognize a foreign arbitrator’s
award.
Article 459. Cases of non-recognition
1. The
Court shall not recognize a foreign arbitrator’s award when deeming that the
evidences provided by the judgment debtors to the Court for appealing against
the application for recognition are well-grounded and the arbitrator’s award
falls within one of the following cases:
a) The
parties of the arbitration agreement do not have capacity to conclude such
agreement according to law applicable to each party;
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c) The
judgment debtors being agencies, organizations and individuals are not promptly
and conformably notified of the appointment of arbitrator officer and of
procedures for processing the disputes at foreign arbitrator, or due to other
plausible reasons, such agencies, organizations and individuals cannot exercise
their procedure rights;
d) The
foreign arbitrator’s award over a dispute is not requested to be settled by any
parties or exceeds the request of parties of the arbitration agreement. If it
is able to separate the parts of the decision on the matter which are requested and
not requested to be settled at foreign arbitrator, the decision on the matter
requested to be settled may be
recognized and enforced in Vietnam;
dd)
Compositions of foreign arbitrator and/or procedures for settlement of disputes
conducted by foreign arbitrator is not conformable to the arbitration agreement
or to the law of the country where the foreign arbitrator’s award has been
made, in case the arbitration agreement does not provide for such matters;
e) The
foreign arbitrator’s award has not taken compulsory legal effect on parties;
g) The
enforcement of the foreign arbitrator’s award has been canceled or terminated
by a competent agency of the country where such award is made or the home
country of the law that is applied.
2. The foreign
arbitrator’s award shall not be recognized is the Vietnam’s Court deems that:
a)
According to Vietnam’s law, the dispute shall not be settled according to
arbitral procedures;
b) The
recognition and enforcement in Vietnam of foreign arbitrator’s award are
contrary to basic principles of law of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam.
Article 460. Sending of decisions of Courts
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2. Within
15 days from the day on which the decision to recognize and enforce or to not
recognize in Vietnam the foreign arbitrator’s award specified in clause 5
Article 458 of this Code is issued, the Court shall send such decision to
involved parties or their lawful representatives, the Ministry of Justice and
the procuracy of the same level. If the involved parties living overseas do not
have lawful representatives in Vietnam and the Court has issued the decision in
their absence according to regulations in clause 3 Article 458 of this Code,
the Court shall send such decision to them by post or via the Ministry of
Justice according to provisions of International treaty to which the Socialist
Republic of Vietnam is a signatory.
3. The
sending of decisions of the Court to involved parties shall comply with methods
specified in Article 474 of this Code.
Article 461. Appeals
1. Within
07 days from the day on which the Court issue the decision specified in clauses
2 and 3 Article 457 or clause 5 Article 458 of this Code, involved parties and
their legal representatives may file an appeal against such decision; if the
involved parties and their lawful representatives did not attend the meeting
for considering the application, the time limit for filing an appeal shall be
counted from the day on which they receive such decision. The appellate
petition must clearly state the reasons for the appeal and the appellate
requests.
In cases
where there are force majeure events or objective obstacles that the involved
parties or their lawful representatives can not file an appeal within such time
limit, the time when the force majeure events or objective obstacles occur
shall not be included in the time limit for appeal.
2. The
Chairpersons of the People’s Procuracies of provinces or Chairpersons of the
Collegial People’s Procuracies may file appeals against the decisions of Courts
specified in clauses 2 and 3 Article 457 and clause 5 Article 458 of this Code.
Time
limit for filing an appeal is 07 days (applicable to the People’s Procuracies
of provinces) or 10 days (applicable to Collegial People’s Procuracies) from
the day on which the procuracy receives the decision.
Article 462. Consideration of appeals
1.
Collegial People’s Court shall re-consider the decision of the People’s Court
of province which is appealed against within 01 month from the day on which the
documents are received; if explanation is required as prescribed in clause 1
Article 457 of this Code, such time limit shall be extended for not exceeding 02
months.
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3. The
Panel for considering the decision being appealed against shall have the
following powers:
a) To
uphold the decision of the first-instance Court;
b) To
modify partially of wholly the decision of the first-instance Court;
c) To
suspend the settlement of the appeal;
d) To
terminate the settlement of the appeal;
dd) To
repeal the decision of the first-instance Court and forward the dossiers to
such first-instance Court for re-settlement according to first-instance
procedures;
e) To
repeal the first-instance decision and terminate the processing of the
application when existing any of circumstances specified in clause 3 Article
457 of this Code.
4. The
Panel for considering the decision being appealed against shall terminate the
processing of an appeal in the following cases:
a) The
involved party withdraws wholly his/her appeal or the procuracy withdraws
wholly its appeal;
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If the
involved party filing appeal withdraws wholly his/her appeal or the procuracy
withdraws wholly its appeal before the appellate Court make a decision to open
a meeting for considering such appeal, the Judge assigned to preside over the
meeting shall make a decision to terminate the resolution of such appeal. If
the involved party filing appeal withdraws wholly his/her appeal or the
procuracy withdraws wholly its appeal when the appellate Court has made a
decision to open a meeting for considering such appeal, appeal consideration
Panel shall make a decision to terminate the resolution of such appeal.
In the
following cases, the decision of the first-instance Court shall take legal
effect from the day on which the appellate Court issues the decision to
terminate the consideration of the appeal.
5. The
Panel in charge of considering the decision being appealed against shall repeal
the decision of the first-instance Court and forward the dossiers to such
first-instance Court for re-processing according to first-instance procedures
in the following cases:
a) The
proving of the involved parties for protesting against the recognition of the
foreign arbitrator’s award or the grounds for the first-instance Court to make
a decision to recognize or to not recognize the foreign arbitrator’s award is
unconformable to provisions of Chapter XXXV and Chapter XXXVII of this
Code, other relevant provisions of Vietnam’s law and of International treaties
to which the Socialist Republic of Vietnam is a signatory;
b)
Members of the Panel in charge of considering the application of the
first-instance Court is unconformable to provisions of Chapter XXXVII of this
Code or is seriously contrary to regulations on procedures that affects lawful
rights and interests of involved parties.
6. A
decision of a Collegial People’s Court shall take legal effect from the day on
which it is issued and may be appealed according to cassation or reopening
procedures according to provisions of this Code.
Article 463. Termination of enforcement, repealing of
decisions to recognize and enforce a foreign arbitrator’ award
1.
Immediately when the written notification of a competent foreign agency of that
the application for repealing or termination of the enforcement of foreign
arbitrator’s award is being considered sent by involved parties or the Ministry
of Justice is received, the Court that has issued the decision to recognize and
enforce in Vietnam such award shall request the Head of Civil judgment
enforcement agency to issue decision to suspend the enforcement of the award.
Immediately
when the request of the Court has been received, Head of the Civil judgment
enforcement agency shall issue a decision to suspend the enforcement of the
award and send such decision to the Court that has issued the decision to
recognize and enforce in Vietnam the foreign arbitrator’s award and to involved
parties and persons with relevant interests and duties.
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2.
Immediately when the written notification of the foreign competent authority of
the repealing or termination of the enforcement of a foreign arbitrator’s award
has been received, Vietnam’s Court that has issued the decision to recognize
and enforce in Vietnam such foreign arbitrator’s award shall issue a decision
to repeal such decision and send such decision to involved parties, persons
with relevant interests and duties, and the civil judgment enforcement agency.
Immediately
when the decision of the Court has been received, Head of the Civil judgment
enforcement agency shall issue a decision to terminate the enforcement of the
foreign arbitrator’s award.
PART EIGHT
PROCEDURES FOR SETTLEMENT OF CIVIL CASES
INVOLVING FOREIGN ELEMENTS
CHAPTER XXXVIII
GENERAL PROVISIONS FOR PROCEDURES FOR
SETTLEMENT OF CIVIL CASES INVOLVING FOREIGN ELEMENTS
Article 464. Principles of application
1. This
Part provides for jurisdiction, procedures for settlement of civil cases
involving foreign elements; if a case is not provided for in this Part, other
relevant provisions of this Code shall be applied.
2. A
civil case involving foreign elements means a civil case falling in any of the
following cases:
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b) All
parties are Vietnamese citizens/agencies/organizations but the relationship is
established, changed, developed or broken up in a foreign country;
c) All
parties are Vietnamese citizens, agencies and organizations but the parties of
such civil relationship are overseas.
3.
Judicial assistance activities in civil procedure shall be conducted according
to regulations of law on Judicial assistance.
Article 465. Procedural rights and obligations of
foreigners, foreign agencies and organizations and branches or representatives
offices of foreign agencies and organizations and international organizations
or their representatives in Vietnam, States of foreign countries
1.
Foreigners, foreign agencies and organizations, international organizations,
representative offices of international organizations in Vietnam may initiate
lawsuits to Vietnamese Courts to request the protection of their legitimate
rights and interests when being infringed upon or when being in dispute.
Foreigners,
foreign agencies and organizations, international organizations, representative
offices of international organizations in Vietnam may initiate lawsuits to
Vietnamese Courts to request the protection of their legitimate rights and
interests when being infringed upon or when being in dispute.
2. When
participating in civil procedures, foreigners, foreign agencies and
organizations and branches or representatives offices in Vietnam of foreign
agencies and foreign organizations and international organizations or their
representatives in Vietnam and States of foreign countries shall have rights
and obligations to conduct procedures like Vietnamese citizens, agencies and
organizations.
3. The
Vietnamese State may apply the principle of reciprocity to restrict relevant
civil procedural rights of foreigners, foreign agencies and organizations,
branches or representative offices of foreign agencies and organizations, and
international organizations or their representative agencies in Vietnam which
the Courts of their countries have restricted towards Vietnamese citizens,
agencies and organizations, and branches and representative offices of overseas
Vietnamese agencies and organizations.
Article 466. Civil-procedure legal capacity and
civil-procedure act capacity of foreigners
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a) Under
the law of the country of which he/she is a citizen. For a stateless foreigner,
his/ her civil-procedure legal capacity and civil-procedure act capacity shall
be determined under the law of the country where he/she resides. For a
stateless foreigner residing in Vietnam, his /her civil-procedure legal
capacity and civil- procedure act capacity shall be determined under Vietnamese
law;
b) If the
foreigner has different foreign citizenships, his /her civil procedure legal
capacity and civil-procedure act capacity shall be determined under the law of
the one of the countries of which he/she is a citizens and where he/she
resides.
For a
foreigner who has different citizenships and resides in a country of which
he/she is not a citizen, his/her civil-procedure legal capacity and
civil-procedure act capacity shall be determined under the law of the country
of which he/she is a citizen for the longest time;
c) Under
Vietnamese law, if he/she has different citizenships including Vietnamese
citizenship, or if he/she has a card for permanent residence or temporary
residence in Vietnam.
2. A
foreigner may have his/her civil-procedure act capacity recognized at a
Vietnamese Court if he/she has such capacity in accordance with Vietnamese law
in spite of not having it in accordance with the law of the relevant foreign
country.
Article 467. Civil-procedure legal capacity of foreign
organizations, branches or representative offices in Vietnam of foreign
agencies and organizations and international organizations and their representatives
offices in Vietnam and of the State of foreign countries
1.
Civil-procedure legal capacity of a foreign agency or organization shall be
determined in accordance with the law of the country where such agency or
organization is established.
Civil-procedure
legal capacity of a branch or representative office of a foreign agency or
organization in Vietnam shall be determined in accordance with Vietnamese law.
2.
Civil-procedure legal capacity of an international organization or its
representative agency shall be determined under the International treaty based
on which such organization is established, the working regulation of such
organization, or the International treaty to which the Socialist Republic of
Vietnam is a signatory.
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Article 468. Protection of legitimate rights and interests
involved parties being foreigners, foreign agencies and organizations, branches
or representative offices in Vietnam of foreign agencies and organizations and
international organizations and their representative offices in Vietnam or the
State of foreign countries
The
involved parties being foreigners, foreign agencies and organizations, branches
or representative offices of foreign agencies and organizations, and
international organizations or their representative agencies in Vietnam that
participate in procedures at Vietnamese Courts may themselves, or ask lawyers
to, defend their lawful rights and interests in accordance with Vietnamese law.
Article 469. Common jurisdiction of Vietnamese Courts to
resolve civil cases involving foreign elements
1.
Vietnamese Courts shall have the jurisdiction to resolve civil cases involving
foreign elements in the following cases:
a) The
defendant is an individual who resides, works or lives for a long term in
Vietnam;
b) The
defendant is an agency or organization which is headquartered in Vietnam or the
defendant is an agency or organization has a branch or a representative office
in Vietnam, applicable to cases related to the operation of the branch or
representative office in Vietnam of such agency/organization;
c) The
defendant has properties in Vietnam;
d) The
divorce cases with the plaintiffs or the defendants being Vietnamese citizens
or involved parties being foreigners who reside, work or live for a long term
in Vietnam;
dd) Civil
cases related to civil relations which are established, changed or terminated
in Vietnam, objects of which are properties in Vietnam or acts performed in
Vietnam;
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2. When
the jurisdiction of Vietnamese Courts have been determined according to
provisions of this Chapter, the Court shall base themselves of provisions of
Chapter III of this Code to determine their specific jurisdiction to resolve
the civil case involving foreign elements.
Article 470. Exclusive jurisdiction of Vietnamese Courts
1. The
following civil lawsuits involving foreign elements shall fall under the
exclusive jurisdiction of Vietnamese courts:
a) Civil
lawsuits involving rights to properties being immovables in the Vietnamese
territory;
b)
Divorce case between a Vietnamese citizen and a foreign citizen or a stateless
person if both spouses reside, work or live permanently in Vietnam;
c) Other
civil lawsuits where parties are allowed to choose Vietnamese Courts to settle
according to Vietnamese law or International treaties to which the Socialist
Republic of Vietnam is a signatory and parties agreed to choose Vietnamese
Courts.
2. The
following civil cases involving foreign elements shall fall under the exclusive
jurisdiction of Vietnamese courts:
a) Claims
without dispute arising from civil legal relationships specified in clause 1 of
this Article;
b) Claims
for determination of a legal events occurring in Vietnam;
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d)
Declaration of foreigner residing in Vietnam having limited civil act capacity
or lacking legal capacity if such declaration is related to the establishment
of their rights and obligations in Vietnam;
dd)
Recognition of a property in Vietnam to be derelict, recognition of the right
to ownership of the current manager over derelict immovables in Vietnam.
Article 471. Not changing the jurisdiction of Courts
Any civil
case involving foreign elements which has been accepted for settlement by a
Vietnamese Court under this Code’s provisions on jurisdiction must be
continually settled by such Court even though during the resolution process
there appear changes of nationalities, residential places or addresses of
involved parties or appear new details which make such civil case falls under
the jurisdiction of another Vietnamese Court or foreign court.
Article 472. Returning the lawsuit petitions or
applications or terminating the resolution of civil cases involving foreign
elements in case arbitration agreements and/or agreements on choosing foreign
Courts have been concluded or in case such civil cases have been settled by
foreign Courts or foreign arbitrators or other foreign competent authorities or
the involved parties are eligible for legal exemption
1.
Vietnamese Courts shall return lawsuit petitions or applications or terminate
the settlement of civil cases involving foreign elements if such civil cases
fall in common jurisdiction of Vietnamese Courts but fall in any of the
following cases:
a)
Involved parties were agreed to choose dispute settlement methods according to
law provisions applicable to civil relationships involving foreign elements and
such involved parties have chosen foreign arbitrators or Courts to settle such
cases/matters.
In case
where the agreements to chose foreign arbitrators or Courts are replaced by
agreements on choosing Vietnamese Courts, or the agreements to choose foreign
arbitrators or Courts are annulled or cannot be executed, or where the foreign
arbitrators or Courts refuse to accept the petitions, thus Vietnamese Courts
shall have the jurisdiction to settle;
b) The
civil cases do not fall within the exclusive jurisdiction of Vietnamese Courts
specified in Article 470 of this Code and fall in the exclusive jurisdiction of
relevant foreign Courts;
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d) The
civil cases are settled by judgments/decisions of the foreign Courts or by
foreign arbitrators’ awards.
If such
judgments/decisions or awards are not recognized by Vietnamese Courts,
Vietnamese Courts shall have jurisdiction to settle such cases;
dd) The
defendants are eligible for legal exemption.
2. If the
petitions are returned or the settlement of civil cases involving foreign
elements specified in clause 1 of this
Article is terminated, the Court fee and charge
advances shall be settled according to
provisions of this Code.
Article 473.
Requests for provision of information about record and determination of
addresses of involved parties living overseas
1. The petitions or written requests must state
clearly full names, addresses and nationalities of involved parties living
overseas enclosed with papers and documents authenticating full names,
addresses and nationalities of such involved parties.
If
full names, addresses and nationalties of involved parties living overseas are
not fully specified, they must be completed within a time limit specified by
the Courts; past such time limit, if such information are not fully provided,
the Courts shall return such petitions/requests.
2. If addresses of the involved parties living
overseas are not identifiable, the litigators/requesters may request Vietnamese Courts to request competent authorities of foreign
countries to determine addresses of the involved parties or may request
competent authorities to find the persons who are absent from their resident
places or request Vietnamese Courts or foreign competent authorities to declare
involved parties missing or death according to Vietnamese law or law of the
foreign countries or International treaties to which the Socialist Republic of
Vietnam is a signatory.
If the
competent authorities of foreign countries respond to Vietnamese Courts that addresses
of the involved parties living overseas are not identifiable or after 06 months
from the day on with the petitions/requests are received, not any response are
made, the Courts shall return such petitions/requests.
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1. The
Court shall deliver or notify its procedural documents by any of the following
methods:
a)
Methods prescribed in International treaties to which the Socialist Republic of
Vietnam is a signatory;
b/
Through the diplomatic channel, for involved parties residing in countries that
are not a co-signatories with the Socialist Republic of Vietnam to a
International treaty;
c) By
post to addresses of involved parties currently residing in foreign countries
if such methods are accepted by the laws of such countries;
d) By
post to overseas representative missions of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam
for being delivered to the involved parties being overseas Vietnamese citizens;
dd/
Through its representative office or branch in Vietnam in accordance with this
provisions of this Code, applicable to foreign agencies or organizations having
representative offices or branches in Vietnam;
e) By
post to legal representatives or proxy representatives in Vietnam of involved
parties living overseas.
2.
Methods of delivery specified at Points a and b Clause 1 of this Article must
comply with the law on Judicial assistance.
3. If the
modes of delivery specified in Clause 1 of this Article are unsuccessfully
applied, the Court shall post up the procedural document at the head office of
the relevant overseas representative mission of the Socialist Republic of
Vietnam, the Court currently processing the case, or the last place of residence
of the involved party in Vietnam for 01 month and on the e-portal of the Court
(if any) and the e-portal of the overseas representative mission of the
Socialist Republic of Vietnam. In necessary cases, the Court may broadcast such
on the central radio or television channels specialized for foreigners three
times for 03 consecutive days.
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The
Courts shall collect evidences in any of the following methods:
1. Those
specified in points a and b clause 1 Article 474 of this Code;
2.
Request by post involved parties being Vietnamese citizens residing overseas to
send papers, materials and evidences to the Vietnamese Court.
Article 476. Notification of acceptance of cases, date for
opening meetings or Court sessions
1. The
Court shall send a notice of acceptance of the case to overseas involved
parties, clearly stating the time and venue for holding the meeting for
checking the handover of, access to, and disclosure of evidences and mediation
(hereinafter referred to as the meeting), resumption of the meeting, and
opening or resumption of the Court session.
2. The
time limit for opening a Court session or a meeting for mediating shall be
determined as follows:
a) A
meeting for mediating shall be opened not earlier than 06 months and not later
than 08 months after the issuance of a written notice of acceptance of the
case. The date of resumption of a mediation meeting (if any) shall be fixed
within 01 month after the date of opening such meeting;
b) A Court
session shall be opened not earlier than 09 months and not later than 12 months
after the issuance of a written notice of acceptance of the case. The date of
resumption of a Court session (if any) shall be fixed within 01 month after the
date of opening such Court session, except for cases specified in Clause 4
Article 477 of this Code.
3. The
Court shall send a notice of acceptance of the civil matter to overseas
involved parties, clearly stating the time and venue for opening or resuming
the meeting for settling a civil matter.
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Article 477. Handling of results of delivery of Court’s
procedural documents to overseas involved parties and results of requesting of
foreign competent authorities to collect evidences
Upon
receiving results of delivery of the court’s procedural document and results of
collection of evidences in a foreign country, the court, on the case-by-case
basis, shall:
1. Not
hold a mediation meeting when it has received the delivery results by one of
the methods specified in Clause 1 Article 474 of this Code and the involved
parties have provided sufficient testimonies, materials and evidences, and the
civil lawsuit falls into the case where no mediation can be held prescribed in
Article 207 of this Code;
2.
Postpone the mediation meeting if it has received the notice of delivery
completion but until the date of holding the m, it receives no testimonies,
documents or evidences from the involved parties that do not ask for permitted
absence from the mediation meeting. In case overseas involved parties are still
absent on the day the mediation meeting is resumed, the Court shall consider it
impossible for conducting the mediation;
3.
Postpone the Court session in the following cases:
a)
Overseas involved parties request in writing the postponement of the first
Court session;
b)
Overseas involved parties are absent from the first Court session, unless they
make a written petition for trial to be conducted in their absence;
4.
Postpone the Court session, if it receives no notice of delivery results or
testimonies, materials or evidences of overseas involved parties and, on the
date of opening the Court session, these involved parties are still absent and
make no written request for trial to be conducted in their absence. Immediately
after the postponement of the Court session, the Court shall request in writing
the Ministry of Justice or overseas representative mission of the Socialist
Republic of Vietnam to notify the delivery of the court’s procedural document
to the involved parties in case the Court makes the delivery via this mission
by one of the methods prescribed in Points a, b and d Clause 1 Article 474 of
this Code.
Within 01
month after receiving the court’s request, the overseas representative mission
of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam shall notify the Court of the result of
delivery of the procedural document to the overseas involved parties.
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Within 5
working days after receiving the reply from the competent foreign authority,
the Ministry of Justice shall give a reply to the court.
Past the 3-month
time limit from the date of transferring the court’s request to the competent
foreign agency, if receiving no reply, the Ministry of Justice shall notify
such to the Court for use as a ground for settlement of the case;
5.
Conduct trial in the absence of overseas involved parties in the following
cases:
a) It has
received the result of delivery of the procedural document to the involved
parties by one of the methods prescribed in Clause 1 Article 474 of this Code
and the involved parties have provided sufficient testimonies, documents or
evidences and requested the Court to conduct trial in their absence;
b) It has
taken measures mentioned in Clause 3 Article 474 of this Code.
c) It
receives no notice from the competent authority mentioned in Clause 4 of this
Article regarding the delivery result;
6. If the
Court receives a written notification of that the delivery cannot be completed
because name and address of the involved party is inaccurate or the involved
party has moved to another address that is unknown to the Court, then the Court
shall:
a)
Request the plaintiff and relatives in Vietnam of overseas involved party (if
any) to provide it with correct or new address of the overseas involved party.
Continue the delivery of the notice of acceptance to overseas involved party
according to the address provided by the plaintiff or the relatives in Vietnam
of the overseas involved party;
b) Make a
decision to terminate the resolution of the case, in case the plaintiff or the
relative in Vietnam of the involved party fails to or refuse to provide correct
or new address of the overseas involved party or the overseas party does not
have a relative in Vietnam. Concurrently, the Court shall explain to the
litigator the right to request the Court to issue notice of finding an involved
party absent from his/her residence or request the Court to declare an involved
party missing or death;
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In such
case, the Court is not required to re-deliver the procedural documents to
overseas involved party. Past the 1-month time limit from the day on which the
notification is posted, the Court shall conduct the trial in the absence of the
involved party.
Article 478. Recognition of papers and materials sent by
foreign agencies, organizations, or individuals to Vietnamese Courts
1.
Vietnamese Courts shall recognize papers and documents made, issued or
certified by competent foreign agencies or organizations in the following
cases:
a)
Papers, materials and notarized or certified Vietnamese translations have been
legalized by consular offices;
b) Papers
and documents are exempt from consular legalization in accordance with
Vietnamese law or International treaties to which the Socialist Republic of
Vietnam is a signatory.
2.
Vietnamese Courts shall recognize papers and materials made by overseas
individuals in the following cases:
a)
Foreign-language papers and documents already translated into Vietnamese are
lawfully notarized or certified in accordance with the Vietnamese law;
b) Papers
and documents made in a foreign country are notarized or certified in
accordance with the law of that country and have been legalized by consular
offices;
c) Papers
and documents made in Vietnamese by overseas Vietnamese citizens with their
signatures certified in accordance with Vietnamese law.
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1.
Involved parties present in Vietnam may appeal against a Court judgment or
decision within the time limit specified in Article 273 of this Code.
2. For
overseas involved parties who are absent from the Court session, the time limit
for them to appeal against a Court judgment or decision is 01 month after such
judgment or decision is duly delivered or posted up in accordance with law.
3. In
case the Court conducts trial in the absence of overseas involved parties under
Point b, Clause 5, Article 477 of this Code, the time limit for filing an
appeal is 12 months since the judgment is pronounced.
Article 480. Delivery or notification of procedural
documents of appellate Courts to overseas involved parties and handling of
delivery or notification results
Appellate
Courts shall deliver or notify procedural documents to overseas involved
parties and handle delivery or notification results in accordance with Articles
474, 476 and 477 of this Code.
Article 481. Determination and provision of foreign law for
the Court to apply in the settlement of civil cases involving foreign elements
If the
Vietnamese Court apply a foreign law to settle a civil case involving foreign
element according to provisions of Vietnamese law and/or of an International
treaty to which the Socialist Republic of Vietnam is a signatory, the
responsibility for determining and providing foreign shall be performed as
follows:
1. If the
involved party of a civil case is allowed to choose a foreign law to be
applied, he/she shall provide the foreign law he/she has chosen for the Court
being in charge of such case. The involved party shall be responsible for the
accuracy and legitimacy of the foreign law he/she provides for the Court.
If
involved parties fail to agreed with each other about the foreign law to be
chosen or in necessary cases, the Court shall request the Ministry of Justice,
the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, consular offices of the Socialist Republic of
Vietnam in foreign countries or request the diplomatic missions of foreign
countries in Vietnam (via the Ministry of Foreign Affairs) to provide the
foreign laws;
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3. The
Court may request agencies, organizations and individuals professional in
foreign laws to provide it with information about foreign laws;
4. Past
the 06-month time limit from the date of request for provision of foreign laws
as provided for in this Article, if there is no response, the Court shall apply
Vietnamese law to settle the civil case.
PART NINE
ENFORCING CIVIL JUDGMENTS/DECISIONS OF
COURTS
Chapter XXXIX
ENFORCING CIVIL JUDGMENTS/DECISIONS OF
COURTS
Article 482. To be-enforced judgments/decisions of courts
1. The to
be-enforced civil judgments/decisions of Courts are those that already took
effect, including:
a)
Judgments/decisions or parts of judgments/decisions of the first-instance
courts, which are not appealed against according to the appellate procedures;
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c)
Cassation/reopening decisions of courts; decisions of Councils of Judges of the
Supreme People’s Court prescribed in Article 360 of this Code;
d) Civil
judgments/decisions of foreign courts, foreign arbitral award, which have been
recognized and permitted for enforcement in Vietnam.
2. The
following judgments/decisions of first-instance Courts shall be immediately
enforced though they may be appealed against or complained/recommended about:
a)
Judgments/decisions on alimonies, remuneration, reinstatement of employees,
wages, severance pays, compensation for loss of capacity for work, redundancy
pays, social insurance, unemployment insurance, health insurance or
compensations for loss of lives, health or mental damage suffered by citizens;
decisions on lawfulness of labor strikes;
b)
Decisions on application of provisional emergency measures.
Article 483. Recording and explanation about the right to
request the enforcement of civil judgment
1. If the
judgment/decision of the Court exists a decision to be enforced according to
regulations in Article 482 of this Code, in the conclusion of such
judgment/decision, the right to request the enforcement of the judgment, the
obligation to enforce the judgment and the prescriptive periods of enforcement
shall be clearly stated.
2. When
issuing a judgment/decision, the Court shall clearly explain the involved
parties about their right to request the judgment enforcement, judgment
enforcement obligation and prescriptive periods for requesting for the
enforcement of the judgment according to provisions of the Law on enforcement
of civil judgments.
Article 484. Issuance of judgments/ decisions of Courts
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Article 485. Time limit for forwarding of
judgments/decisions
1. The
Court that has issued the judgment/decision specified in clause 1 Article 482
of this Code must forward such judgment/decision to competent
civil-judgment-executing bodies within 01 month from the day on which such
judgment/decision takes legal effect, unless otherwise prescribed by law.
2. The
Court that has issued the judgment/decision specified in point a clause 2
Article 482 of this Code must forward such judgment/decision to competent
civil-judgment-executing bodies within 15 days from the day on which such
judgment/decision takes legal effect.
3. The
Court that has made the decision to apply provisional emergency measures or
decision on the legitimacy of a strike must forward such decision to competent
civil-judgment-executing bodies immediately when such decision has been issued.
4. If the
competent agencies have distrained
upon the properties, impounded the properties,
confiscated the exhibits or other documents related to the enforcement of the
judgments, when forwarding the judgments/decisions to the
civil-judgment-executing bodies, the Court must enclose with them copies of
minutes of the distrainment, impoundment or confiscation of exhibits and other
relevant documents.
Article 486. Explanation for and modification of judgments/
decisions of Courts
1.
Judgment creditors, judgment debtors, persons with relevant interests and
duties to the enforcement of the judgment/decisions of the Court and
judgment-executing bodies shall be entitled to request in writing the Court
issuing such judgments/decisions to explain and modify unclear information in
such judgments/decisions to enforce them.
2. The
Judges that have made the decisions or the Judges being the presiding Judges of
the Court sessions shall be in charge of explaining and modifying unclear
information in the judgments/decisions of the Courts. If such Judges are no
longer the Judges of the Courts, the Chief Justices of such Courts shall take
their charge.
3. The
explanation of judgments/decisions of the Courts shall base on the minutes of
the Court session, of the meeting or the deliberation minutes. The modification
of a judgment/decision of a Court shall comply with regulations in Article 268
of this Code.
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If a
civil-judgment enforcement agency file a recommendation about the
re-consideration of a judgment/decision of the Court according to cassation or
reopening procedures, the competent Court shall make response within 03 months
from the day on which the recommendation is received; if the case is too
complicated, such time limit shall be 04 months from the day on which the
recommendation is received.
Article 488. Jurisdiction, procedures for consideration for
exemption or reduction of judgment enforcement obligation regarding the amounts
payable to the State budget by the Court
1.
Jurisdiction to consider the exemption or reduction of judgment enforcement
obligation regarding the amounts payable to the State budget by the Court shall
be determined as follows:
a)
People’s Courts of districts where the civil-judgment-executing bodies which
are carrying out the enforcement of the judgment are headquartered shall be
entitled to consider the applications for exemption or reduction of judgment
enforcement obligation regarding the amounts payable to the State budget;
b)
People’s Courts of provinces shall be entitled to consider according to
appellate procedures Court decisions on the exemption or reduction of judgment
enforcement obligation regarding the amounts payable to the State budget which
are appealed against by the procuracies;
c)
Collegial People’s Courts shall be entitled to consider according to re-opening
procedures Court decisions on exemption or reduction of legally effective
judgment obligation which are appealed against within their jurisdiction.
2. Order
and procedures for consideration for exemption or reduction of judgment
enforcement obligation regarding the amounts payable to the State budget shall
be conformable to provisions of the Law on civil judgment enforcement.
PART TEN
HANDLING ACTS OF OBSTRUCTING CIVIL
PROCEEDINGS; COMPLAINTS AND DENUNCIATIONS IN CIVIL PROCEDURES
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HANDLING ACTS OF OBSTRUCTING CIVIL
PROCEEDINGS
Article 489. Handling acts of obstructing the verification
and collection of evidences by proceeding officers
Those who
commit one of the following acts shall, depending on the nature and severity of
the violations, be disciplined, be imposed administrative penalties or face
criminal prosecution as prescribed in law:
1.
Forging or destroying important exhibits, thus obstructing the resolution of
cases by courts;
2.
Refusing to provide or provide untruthful testimonies or providing false
materials when acting as witnesses;
3.
Refusing to produce results of expertise of refusing to provide information
without good and sufficient reason or produce untruthful expertise results;
4.
Intentionally giving untruthful interpretation;
5.
Failing to assign a person to join the Price Assessment Council at the request
of the Court without a plausible reason; failing to perform the duties of the
Price Assessment Council without a plausible reason;
6.
Obstructing a procedure-conducting person to make on-site inspection and
appraisal, conduct assessment and/or expertise or verify or collect other
evidences in accordance with this Code;
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8.
Deceiving, bribing, threatening, forcing, or using force to prevent an expert
witness from performing his/her duty, or compelling him/her to make an
untruthful conclusion;
9.
Deceiving, bribing, threatening, forcing, or using force to prevent an
interpreter from performing his/her duty or compelling him/her to give
untruthful, biased or wrong interpretation.
Article 490. Handling measures applicable to witnesses who
are intentionally not present under courts’ subpoenas
1. In cases
where witnesses or the interpreters have been duly summoned by Courts but have
deliberately declined to go to Courts or to be present in Court sessions or
meeting without plausible reasons and their absence caused obstacles to the
collection and/or verification of evidences or the adjudication of cases, they
shall face administrative sanction according to law provisions.
2. In
cases specified in clause 1 of this Article, the Courts shall be entitled to
issue decisions to escort the witness to the Court sessions or meetings, unless
the witnesses are minors. Decisions on escorting witnesses must clearly state
the time and places of their issuance; the full names and positions of the
persons issuing the decisions; the full names, dates of birth and residence
places of the witnesses, the time and places for the witnesses to be present.
3. The
public security offices having the task to enforce the Court decisions shall be
in charge of escorting witnesses. Executors of such decisions must read out and
explain them to the to be-escorted persons and make records on the escort.
Article 491. Handling of violations against the internal
rules of Court sessions
1.
Persons committing violations against the internal rules of Court sessions
specified in Article 234 of this Code shall, depending on nature and severity
of the violations, face administrative penalties imposed by the presiding
Judges according to law provisions.
2. The
presiding Judges shall be entitled to make decisions to compel the violators
specified in clause 1 of this Article to leave the courtroom. Public security
offices having the task to protect Court sessions or persons having the task to
protect the order of the Court sessions shall enforce the presiding Judges’
decisions on forcible departures from Court rooms or admistrative custody
against persons who cause disturbance in Court sessions.
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4.
Provisions of this Article shall be also applicable to persons who commit
violations in the Court’s meetings.
Article 492.
Actions against acts offending or injuring the solemn and/or prestige of the
Court, honor, dignity or health of proceeding officers or other persons
carrying out duties at the request of the Court
Any
person performing an act offending or injuring the solemn and/or prestige of
the Court, honor, dignity or health of proceeding officers or other persons
carrying out duties at the request of the Court shall, depending on nature and
severity of the violations, be imposed administrative penalties or be liable to
criminal prosecution according to law provisions.
Article 493. Actions against the issuance, sending,
receiving, delivery or notice of procedural documents of the Court
Any
person shall, depending on nature and severity of the violations, be imposed
disciplinary penalties, administrative penalties or liable to criminal
prosecution according to law provisions if he/she performs any of the following
acts:
1. Fail
to perform the issuance, sending, delivery or notice of procedural documents of
the Court at the request of the Court without plausible reasons;
2.
Destroy procedural documents of the Court that the Court assigned them to
issue, deliver or notice;
3. Forge
the results of the deliver or notice of procedural documents of the Court that
are assigned;
4.
Preclude the issuance, sending, Receiving, delivery or notice of procedural
documents of the Court.
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Those who
threaten, assault, or take advantage of others’ dependence to prevent
representatives of agencies, organizations or individuals from attending Court
sessions or meetings as summoned by the Courts shall, depending on the nature
and severity of their violations, be administratively sanctioned or be liable
to criminal prosecution according to law provisions.
Article 495. Actions against acts of failing to executive
Court decisions on provisions of documents and evidences to the Court or acts
of reporting untruthful information in order to obstruct Court’s settlement of
cases
1.
Agencies, organizations or individuals that fail to execute the Court decision
on provision of documents and evidences they are currently managing or keeping
shall be administratively sanctioned in accordance with law.
2. Those
who report untruthful information in order to obstruct the Court’s settlement
of the case shall, depending on the nature and severity of their violations, be
administratively sanctioned, administratively sanctioned or be liable to
criminal prosecution in accordance with law.
Article 496. Actions against acts interfering in the
settlement of civil cases
Those who
use their influence to exert impacts in any form on the Judge or another member
of the Trial Panel in order to make the settlement of the case biased or
unlawful shall, depending on the nature and severity of their violations, be
imposed disciplinary measures, be administratively sanctioned or be liable to
criminal prosecution in accordance with law.
Article 497. Responsibilities of the procuracies in cases
where the Courts institute criminal cases
1. In
cases where the Courts institute criminal cases as stipulated in Clauses 3 and
4 Article 491 of this Code, within 15 days from the day on which the
institution decisions are issued, the Courts shall forward to the competent
procuracies the institution decisions and materials and evidences
substantiating the criminal acts.
2. The
procuracies shall be responsible for considering and settling according to
provisions of the Criminal Procedure Code.
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Forms of
penalty, competence, order and procedures for imposing administrative penalties
on acts that obstruct civil procedure activities shall comply with provisions
of the Law on Actions against administrative violations and relevant law
provisions.
Chapter XLI
COMPLAINTS AND DENUNCIATIONS IN CIVIL
PROCEDURES
Article 499. Decisions and acts in civil procedures which
may be complained about
1.
Agencies, organizations or individuals shall be entitled to complain about
procedural decisions or acts of civil proceeding authorities/persons when there
are grounds for presuming that such decisions or acts are illegal or infringe
upon their legitimate rights and interests.
2. For
first-instance, appellate, cassation or reopening judgments/decisions of Courts
or other procedural decisions issued by civil proceeding officers, if being
appealed against, complained about or petitioned, they shall be settled not
according to the provisions of this Chapter but according to the provisions of
corresponding chapters of this Code.
Article 500. Rights and obligations of complainants
1.
Complainants shall have the following rights:
a) To
lodge complaints by themselves or through their lawful representatives;
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c) To
withdraw their complaints at any stage of the resolution of the cases;
d) To
receive written replies on the acceptance of their complaints; to receive the
complaint-resolving decisions;
dd) To
have their legitimate rights or interests restored; to receive damages as
provided for by law.
2.
Complainants shall have the following obligations:
a) To
lodge their complaints to the right persons who are competent to settle them;
b) To
give truthful presentations of the cases, to supply information and documents
to persons handling the complaints; to take responsibility before law for the
contents of their presentations and the supply of such information and
documents;
c) Not to
abuse the right to complain to obstruct the procedural activities of the
courts;
d) To
abide by decisions and acts of presiding officers that they are complaining
about during the complaining period;
dd) To
strictly abide by the complaint-resolving decisions which have taken legal
effect.
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1. The
complained persons shall have the following rights:
a) To
acquire knowledge about grounds for complaint of the complainants; to produce
evidences of the legality of their procedural decisions or acts which are being
complained about;
b) To
receive decisions on the resolution of the complaints about their own
procedural decisions or acts.
2. The
complained persons shall have the following obligations:
a) To
explain their procedural decisions or acts being complained about; to provide
relevant information or documents when so requested by competent agencies,
organizations or individuals;
b) To
strictly abide by the decisions on the resolution of the complaints which have
taken legal effect;
c) To
compensate for damage, to reimburse or address the consequences caused by their
illegal procedural decisions or acts as provided for by law.
Article 502. Statute of limitations for lodging complaints
The time
limit specified in statute of limitation for lodging a complaint is 15 days as
from the date the complainant receives or knows about the procedural
decision/act which he/she deems illegal.
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Article 503. Forms of complaint
Complaint
petitions must be made in writing. A written complaint petition must clearly
state the date; full name and address of the complainant; complaint contents
and reasons for the complaint, request of the complainant, signature or
fingerprints of the complainant.
Article 504. Competence resolution of complaints against
decisions/acts of proceeding officers
1.
Complaints against decisions/acts of proceeding officers being Judges,
Deputy-Chief Justices, Ombudspersons, Court clerks or People’s Jurors shall be
settled by the competent Chief Justices of Courts being in charge of such civil
cases.
Complaints
against procedural decisions/acts of Chief Justices of Courts shall be settled
by the competent Chief Justices of the immediately superior courts.
2.
Complaints against decisions/acts of proceeding officers being procurators,
inspectors, deputy chairpersons of procuracies shall be settled by the
chairpersons of the procuracies.
Complaints
against procedural decisions/acts of chairpersons of procuracies shall be
settled by competent chairpersons of the immediately superior procuracies.
3.
Complaints against the first complaint-resolving decisions of the Chief
Justices or the Chairpersons of procuracies provided for in clauses 1 and 2 of
this Article shall be settled by the Chief Justices/Chairpersons of the
immediately superior courts/procuracies.
Article 505. Time limit for resolution of complaints
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Article 506. Contents of decisions on first complaint
resolution
1. Persons
who resolve complaints for the first time must issue written decisions on
resolution of the complaints. A decision on resolution of a complaint shall
include the following information:
a) Date
of issuing the decision;
b) Name
and address of the complainant and the complained person;
c)
Complained matters;
d) Result
of the verification of the complained matters;
dd) Legal
grounds for resolution of the complaint;
e)
Decision on first complaint resolution.
2. First
complaint-resolving decisions must be sent to the complainants and relevant
individuals, agencies and organizations. If the decisions are issued by the
Chief Justices of the courts, they must be sent to procuracies of the same
levels.
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1. Within
05 working days from the day on which the first complaint-resolving decisions
are received, if the complainants disagree with such decisions, they may file
complaints with competent persons for second complaint resolution.
2. The
complaint petitions must be enclosed with copies of first complaint-resolving
decisions and accompanying materials.
A written
complaint petition must clearly state the date; full name and address of the
complainant; complaint contents and reasons for the complaint; signature or fingerprints
of the complainant.
3. A
second complaint-resolving decision must include the following information:
a)
Information specified in points a, b, c, d and dd clause 1 Article 506 of this
Code;
b) Result
of the first complaint resolution;
c) Conclusions
about specific matters in the complaint petition and the resolution of the
second complaint-resolving persons.
4. Second
complaint-resolving decisions must be sent to the complainants and relevant
individuals, agencies and organizations. If the decisions are issued by the
Chief Justices of the courts, they must be sent to procuracies of the same
levels.
5. Second
complaint-resolving decisions shall be effective.
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The
resolution of complaints against expertise activities in civil procedures shall
comply with law regulations on judicial expertise and relevant law provisions.
Article 509. Persons who have right to denounce
Individuals
are entitled to denounce to competent agencies, organizations or individuals
illegal acts of competent proceeding officers which cause or threaten to cause
damage to the State’s interests or legitimate rights and interests of agencies,
organizations or individuals.
Article 510. Rights and obligations of denouncers
1.
Denouncers shall have the following rights:
a) To
file their written denunciations or directly present denunciations to competent
agencies, organizations or individuals;
b) To
request that their full names, addresses and autographs be kept secret;
c) To
request that the results of resolution of their denunciations be notified to
them;
d) To
request that competent agencies, organizations and individuals protect them
when they are threatened, bullied or revenged.
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a) To
honestly present the contents of their denunciations;
b) To
clearly state their full names and addresses;
c) To
take responsibility before law for untruthful denunciations.
Article 511. Rights and obligations of the denounced
persons
1.
Denounced persons shall have the following rights:
a) To be
notified of the denunciation contents;
b) To
produce evidences to prove that the denunciation contents are untrue;
c) To
have their legitimate rights and interests that have been infringed upon
restored; to have their honor restored; and to enjoy compensation for the
damage caused by false denunciations;
d) To
request competent agencies, organizations or individuals to handle persons who
gave untruthful denunciations.
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a) To
explain their denounced acts; to provide relevant information and documents
when so requested by competent agencies, organizations or individuals;
b) To
strictly abide by the handling decisions of competent agencies, organizations
or individuals;
c) To pay
damages, reimburse or address consequences caused by their illegal civil
procedural acts according to law provisions.
Article 512. Competence and time limit for resolution of
denunciations
1.
Denunciations of illegal acts of persons competent to conduct procedures of any
competent agencies shall be settled by the heads of such agencies.
In cases
where the denounced persons are courts’ Chief Justices, deputy-Chief Justices,
chairpersons or deputy-chairpersons of the procuracies, the Chief Justices of
the immediately superior Courts or the chairpersons of the immediately superior
procuracies shall have responsibility to settle the cases.
The time
limit for resolution of a denunciation shall not exceed 02 months as from the
date on which the denunciation is accepted; for complicated cases, the time
limit for denunciation resolution may be longer but shall not exceed 03 months.
2.
Denunciations of illegal acts which show criminal signs shall be settled
according to the provisions of the Criminal Procedure Code.
Article 513. Procedures for denunciation resolution
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Article 514. Responsibilities of persons competent to
settle complaints/denunciations
1.
Competent agencies, organizations or individuals shall, within the scope of
their tasks and powers, have the responsibility to receive and promptly and
properly settle complaints or denunciations; to strictly handle violators; to
apply necessary measures to prevent possible damage or losses; to ensure strict
execution of settling decisions and have to take legal responsibility for their
decisions.
2. Those
who are competent to settle complaints or denunciations but fail to settle
them, show irresponsibility in settling them or settle them illegally shall,
depending on the nature and severity of the violations, be disciplined or examined
for penal liability; if causing damage, they must pay compensations therefor
according to law provisions.
Article 515. Inspection and supervision of law observation
in resolution of complaints and denunciations in civil procedures
The
people’s procuracies shall inspect and supervise the law observance in the
resolution of complaints and denunciations in civil procedures according to law
provisions. The procuracies are entitled to request or recommend the Courts of
the same and lower levels, responsible agencies, organizations and individuals
to ensure that the settlement of complaints/denunciations is well grounded and
lawful.
Chapter XLII
IMPLEMENTARY CLAUSE
Article 516. Amendment to a number of articles of the Labor
Code No. 10/2012/QH13
1.
Article 52 shall be amended as follows:
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People’s
Courts shall be entitled to declare labor contracts to be invalid.”
2.
Articles 223, 224, 225, 226, 227, 228, 229, 230, 231, 232 and 234 Section 5
Chapter XIV of the Labor Code No. 10/2012/QH13 shall be annulled.
Article 517. Effect
1. This
Code takes effect from July 01st, 2016, except for the following
provisions related to provisions of the Civil Code No. 91/2015/QH13 that take
effect from January 01st, 2017:
a)
Provisions related to that the Courts must not refuse to resolve civil cases
for the reasons that there are no applicable law provisions prescribed in
clause 2 Article 4, Articles 43, 44 and 45 of this Code;
b)
Provisions pertaining to persons with limited cognition or behavior control;
c)
Provisions pertaining to the application of statute of limitations provided for
in clause 2 Article 184 and point e clause 1 Article 217 of this Code;
d)
Provisions pertaining to legal entities being representatives or guardians.
2. The
Civil Procedure Code No. 24/2004/QH11 that has been amended according to the
Law No. 65/2011/QH12 shall expire since this Code comes into effect, except for
provisions of Article 159 and point h clause 1 Article 192 that shall be
effective until the end of December 31st, 2016.
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CHAIRPERSON OF THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY
Nguyen Sinh Hung