After four years of negotiations the Hague Convention of 5 November 2007 on the International Recovery of Child Support and other Forms of Family Maintenance and the Protocol on Applicable Law was adopted by the Hague Conference on Private International Law at its Twenty-First Session. The intention of the negotiators was to produce a convention designed to respond to the often modest needs of children and other dependents by providing international procedures which are simple, swift, cost-effective, accessible, fair, and build upon features of existing international instruments.
A. History and Background
The history of the Hague Conference with regard to maintenance goes back to the 1950s when the Eighth Session adopted two Conventions relating to maintenance. One dealt with the recognition and enforcement of decisions relating to maintenance obligations towards children while the other dealt with applicable law.Footnote 1 It was in the same era that the United Nations drew up the New York Convention of 2 June 1956 on the Recovery Abroad of Maintenance.Footnote 2 This was a remarkable convention for its time, and it provided the only global framework for administrative cooperation in the international recovery of maintenance, for both children and other family dependents. Two decades later, the Hague Conventions on child support were revised and extended. Once again two Hague Conventions were adopted, each designed to replace one of the Conventions from the 1950s.Footnote 3
Since 1992, encouraged by the United Nations, the Hague Conference has been monitoring the operation of the New York Convention together with that of the four Hague Conventions and convened Special Commission meetings for this purpose, involving all States Parties to the New York Convention, as well as Member States of the Hague Conference and States Parties to the Hague Conventions. The Special Commission was at first reluctant to consider further international instruments in an area in which so many instruments already existed. Despite this natural reluctance, the Special Commission eventually recommended a radical approach, namely that the Hague Conference should start work on a new worldwide instrument.Footnote 4 This gave rise to a new mandate: the preparation of a new comprehensive Convention on maintenance obligations, which would build on the best features of the existing Hague Conventions and include rules on judicial and administrative cooperation.Footnote 5
The first round of negotiations took place in May 2003 and this was followed by further negotiations over the subsequent years which culminated in a three week Diplomatic Session in November 2007.Footnote 6 While initially the Convention was intended to cover all aspects found in the previous Conventions, it was found that it was not possible to reach a compromise between those States who were open to the application of a foreign law, and those States who preferred the application of the law of the forum. Due to this, the rules regarding applicable law are now to be found in an optional Protocol to the Convention.
B. The Convention
The Convention has nine chapters and 65 articles, as well as two annexes consisting of forms to be used by Central Authorities to assist in communication. Its objects are to ensure the effective international recovery of child support and other forms of family maintenance, and Article 1 sets out the means by which this will be achieved. Apart from applicable law, which is found in the Protocol, the other aspect of private international law which is absent from this list is the determination of jurisdiction. The Convention does not provide direct rules, but deals with jurisdiction indirectly within the bases for recognition and enforcement.Footnote 7 This stance is also found in the previous Hague Conventions but is a major difference from the scheme set up under the Brussels I Regulation.Footnote 8
1. Scope
Article 2 allows a number of options for the scope of the Convention. It starts on a positive note by saying that it will apply to all maintenance obligations arising from a parent-child relationship towards a person under the age of 21. However, States can make a reservation to the effect that the application of the Convention will be limited to persons who are under the age of 18 rather than 21.
As for spousal support, the entire Convention will apply to the recognition and/or enforcement of a decision for spousal support when the application is made with a claim for parent-child maintenance.Footnote 9 For spousal support more generally, while the Convention will apply, the chapters on administrative cooperation and applications made through the Central Authorities will not.Footnote 10
Another option is found in Article 2(3), which gives States the right to make a declaration that the application of the whole or any part of the Convention will be extended to any maintenance obligation arising from a family relationship, parentage, marriage, or affinity, including in particular obligations to vulnerable persons. Such a declaration would give rise to obligations between two Contracting States only to the extent that their declarations covered the same maintenance obligations and parts of the Convention.
These limitations and options for scope are not unusual among the previous Hague Conventions in the area. The Hague Conventions from the 1950s are limited to child support obligations, and the scope of the 1973 Hague Convention could be reduced from maintenance arising out of a family relationship by way of a system of reservations.Footnote 11 In contrast, in Europe, the Brussels I Regulation does not provide any limits to the nature of the maintenance obligation that will be covered and the Proposal for a Council Regulation on Maintenance ObligationsFootnote 12 states that it will apply to maintenance obligations arising from family relationships or relationships deemed by the law applicable to such relationships as having comparable effects.
The application of the various instruments is also affected by the new Convention. It is intended to replace both of the previous Hague Maintenance (Enforcement) ConventionsFootnote 13 and also the New York Convention, but the latter only to the extent to which their scope coincides.Footnote 14 The effect of Article 51, which specifically makes reference to Regional Economic Integration Organisations, allows the maintenance provisions of the Brussels I Regulation to continue to operate as between Member States of the European Union. The new Convention will also not affect the application of future instruments concluded by such an organisation, such as the proposed Maintenance Regulation, provided that such instruments do not affect the application of the provisions of the Convention in the relationship of Member States of the Regional Economic Integration Organisation with other Contracting States. This will allow the proposed Maintenance Regulation to take precedence over the Convention in relations between Member States.Footnote 15
B. Administrative Cooperation
The new Convention differentiates itself from the 1973 Hague (Enforcement) ConventionFootnote 16 by providing for Central Authorities to play an important role. In this way it incorporates the ideas behind the New York Convention, while trying to ensure that the result would be more effective cooperation in practice.Footnote 17 The general functions of the Central Authorities comprise cooperating with each other and promoting cooperation among the competent authorities in order to achieve the purposes of the Convention, as well as seeking possible solutions to difficulties which arise in the application of the Convention.Footnote 18 More specifically, the Central Authorities will be responsible for transmitting and receiving applications and initiating or facilitating the institution of proceedings in respect of such applications. They are also required to take all appropriate measures to provide or facilitate the provision of legal assistance, help locate the debtor or the creditor, encourage amicable solutions and the voluntary payment of maintenance, facilitate the ongoing enforcement of maintenance, the collection and transfer of maintenance payments and the obtaining of documentary or other evidence, provide assistance in establishing parentage, and facilitate service of documents.Footnote 19
Each Central Authority is to bear its own costs in applying the Convention and may not impose any charge on applicants, with the exception of exceptional costs arising from a request for the Central Authority to take certain measures to assist a potential applicant who has not yet made an application under the Convention.Footnote 20
C. An Application under the Convention
There are two ways in which a maintenance application can be made to a foreign authority: the general method of a direct application by the applicant to the competent authority or through a Central Authority under the system set up specifically by this Convention.Footnote 21 The drafters realised that the majority of applicants would often be families with limited resources and seeking relatively low amounts.Footnote 22 As a method of achieving low cost access to foreign legal systems, there is a chapter of the Convention devoted to the process for Central Authority applications.Footnote 23
This chapter provides that applications for establishment, for modification and for recognition and enforcement can be made through the Central AuthorityFootnote 24 and provides all the rules for the transmission, receipt and processing of these applications.Footnote 25 In addition, the chapter also houses the rules regarding legal assistance and free legal aid. These issues were the subject of intense debate during the negotiations, and the resulting compromise is stated over four articles.
Article 14 sets out the basic obligation to provide effective access to procedures, including free legal assistance in accordance with this set of articles, unless the procedures of the requested State enable the applicant to make the case without the need for such assistance and the Central Authority provides such services as are necessary free of charge. Under Article 15, the requested State is obliged to provide free legal assistance for the creditor in child support cases, unless it considers that the application or any appeal is manifestly unfounded on the merits. However, Article 16 provides this obligation can be limited through a declaration by the State to cases where the recognition or enforcement of an existing decision is being sought and that a child-centred means test will apply in all other cases.Footnote 26 Article 17 then allows a State to make the provision of free legal assistance subject to a means test for all other applicants. This is subject to the condition that an applicant who benefits from free legal assistance in his or her State of origin is entitled, in proceedings for recognition and enforcement, to benefit to at least the same extent from the free legal assistance provided in the requested State.Footnote 27 These provisions are significant as the level of free legal assistance that States must provide is probably the most generous found in private international law and international legal cooperation.
D. Restrictions on Bringing Proceedings
Article 18 provides that proceedings cannot be brought in another State to modify a decision made in the State of the habitual residence of the creditor as long as the creditor remains habitually resident in that State.Footnote 28 The aim is to prevent the generation of multiple decisions, a problem which the inability to agree on direct rules on jurisdiction left open. No similar provision was found in the earlier conventions but it was felt that this article was necessary for the protection of the creditor and to prevent the denial of justice.Footnote 29 This article, combined with the absence of an indirect jurisdictional ground based on the habitual residence of the debtor, as opposed to the respondent, are clearly aimed at preventing the practices that developed, particularly in the United Kingdom, under the 1973 Hague (Enforcement) Convention of allowing the modification of a decision at the time of its recognition and enforcement.Footnote 30
E. Recognition and Enforcement
These rules are found in Chapters V and VI. Article 20 sets out the jurisdictional requirements for recognition and enforcement. There are six listed:
∘ the respondent was habitually resident in the State of origin at the time proceedings were instituted;
∘ the respondent has submitted to the jurisdiction either expressly or by defending on the merits of the case without objecting to the jurisdiction at the first available opportunity;
∘ the creditor was habitually resident in the State of origin at the time proceedings were instituted;
∘ the child for whom maintenance was ordered was habitually resident in the State of origin at the time proceedings were instituted, provided that the respondent has lived with the child in that State or has resided in that State and provided support for the child there;
∘ except in disputes relating to maintenance obligations in respect of children, there has been agreement to the jurisdiction in writing by the parties; or
∘ the decision was made by an authority exercising jurisdiction on a matter of personal status or parental responsibility, unless that jurisdiction was based solely on the nationality of one of the parties.
Jurisdiction exercised by an authority in a State where both parties were nationals will no longer be sufficient to warrant recognition and enforcement, as was the case under the 1973 Hague (Enforcement) Convention. Aside from that, the provisions largely reflect acceptable jurisdictional grounds found in other instruments, including the proposed Maintenance Regulation.Footnote 31 However, unlike in other instruments, reservations can be made for three of these grounds.Footnote 32 The effect of such reservations has been limited. First, a State is required to recognise the decision if its law would in similar factual circumstances confer jurisdiction on its own authorities to make such a decisionFootnote 33 and, second, if a refusal to recognise is as a result of a reservation, a State is required to ensure that all appropriate measures are taken to establish a decision for the benefit of the creditor.Footnote 34
Article 22 lists the grounds on which recognition may be refused. These include the usual grounds of public policy, fraud, incompatible decisions, and protection for debtors who had not appeared or were not represented at the proceedings. Recognition can also be refused if the decision was made in violation of the restrictions placed on bringing proceedings found in Article 18. The provisions that recognition may be refused on the grounds of an incompatible decision made or recognisable in the requested State reflect those in the 1973 Hague (Enforcement) Convention,Footnote 35 but differ from the Brussels I RegulationFootnote 36 by not specifying that if the incompatible decision is from a third State it must have been rendered earlier.
The procedure to be followed in an application for recognition and enforcement is set out in Article 23, with an alternative procedure provided for in Article 24. This was another set of articles requiring intense discussion in order to achieve the current consensus. The original procedure was that found in Article 23 alone,Footnote 37 and this envisages a two-step process whereby a decision would be declared enforceable or registered for enforcement without delay, the only ground on which the relevant authority could refuse was that of public policy. The parties would not be entitled to make any representations at this point, but rather could challenge or appeal this decision.Footnote 38 Such a challenge can only be based on the grounds set out in Article 22, the bases for recognition or enforcement set out in Article 20 or the authenticity or integrity of one of the documents transmitted. The aim behind this article, reducing the procedural aspects of recognition, can also be seen in developments at the European level, where the discussion on the proposed Maintenance Regulation are working towards the automatic recognition of maintenance orders made in other Member States and allowing a challenge only at the enforcement stage.Footnote 39
The alternativeFootnote 40 is a one-step procedure of which the respondent is duly notified and where both parties are given adequate opportunity to be heard. The competent authority is allowed, of its own motion, to refuse recognition and enforcement on the grounds of public policy and the existence of incompatible decisions, and the rest of the grounds may be reviewed if raised by the respondent or if concerns arise from the face of the documents submitted.
For both of these procedures, a refusal may also be founded on the fulfilment of the debt to the extent that the application relates to payments that fell due in the past.Footnote 41 In addition, if there is a further appeal allowed for under the domestic law of the State addressed, this is governed by that domestic law, although such an appeal will not have the effect of staying the enforcement of the decision unless there are exceptional circumstances.Footnote 42 As under the previous Hague Maintenance Conventions and the Brussels I Regulation, the decision cannot be reviewed on the merits.Footnote 43 There is also an additional new rule that the physical presence of the child or the applicant is not to be required at any proceedings in the requested State.Footnote 44
There was great concern during the negotiations to ensure that the enforcement provisions would be effective and prompt.Footnote 45 While, as in the 1973 Hague (Enforcement) Convention, enforcement is to take place in accordance with the law of the State addressed, this Convention takes a step further into influencing internal laws on the enforcement of foreign decisions. If a decision has been declared enforceable, or registered for enforcement, following an application made through a Central Authority, enforcement must proceed without the need for further action from the applicant.Footnote 46
States have to provide the same range of enforcement measures for foreign orders as for domestic ones,Footnote 47 and must make available in internal law effective measures to enforce decisions under this Convention.Footnote 48 Article 34(2) goes on to list a number of measures that may be used to effectively enforce maintenance decisions. It is clear that this paragraph does not impose an obligation on any State to introduce each of the measures listed, but it is also clear that the first paragraph contains a mandatory clause for all States that foreign maintenance decisions must be enforced effectively, and that these examples indicate what will generally be considered the most suitable methods to achieve this.Footnote 49
F. Maintenance Agreements
Article 30 provides for the recognition of maintenance agreements. As with ‘settlements’ under the 1973 Hague (Enforcement) Convention and ‘authentic instruments’ and ‘court settlements’ under the Brussels I Regulation,Footnote 50 some formal official recognition of the parties' agreement by a competent authority is mandatory.Footnote 51 In addition to the requirements that it must be an agreement in writingFootnote 52 and relate to the payment of maintenance, it also has to have been either formally drawn up or registered as an authentic instrument by a competent authority, or authenticated by, or concluded, registered or filed with a competent authority. In either case it should also be possible for a competent authority to review and modify the agreement.
Once a maintenance agreement fills these requirements and is enforceable as a decision in the State of origin, it will be entitled to be recognised and enforced in all other Contracting States. Most of the provisions in the Convention relating to recognition and enforcement apply to maintenance decisions, although some distinctions are made. There are no jurisdictional requirements for recognition. There is also a separate set of circumstances in which a maintenance agreement will be refused recognition and enforcement, the first being the making of a reservation by a State to the effect that they will not recognize and enforce a maintenance agreement. A competent authority may also refuse to recognize or enforce a decision based on its manifest incompatibility with public policy, because it was obtained by fraud or falsification or because it is incompatible with a decision, which is entitled to recognition or enforcement, rendered between the same parties and having the same purpose, either in the State addressed or in another State.Footnote 53 In addition, States may make a declaration that applications for the recognition and enforcement of maintenance agreements shall only be made through Central Authorities.Footnote 54
G. Public Authorities
One reason why establishing an international framework for the recovery of maintenance was a high priority for States is the impact that it can have on the national treasury. Because of this, it is important to allow for situations where public authorities act in place of the maintenance creditor, usually in situations where the public authority has already made payments to the maintenance creditor. This had been incorporated into the provisions of the 1973 Hague (Enforcement) Convention and has also been recognised by the European Court of Justice in its interpretation of the Brussels I Regulation.Footnote 55 Article 36 largely replicates the rules in the earlier conventionFootnote 56 and allows public authorities to fall under the definition of a creditor within the terms of the Convention for the purposes of seeking recognition and enforcement of a maintenance decision.
There are limitations: the public body can only seek payment to the extent of the benefits that it has already provided,Footnote 57 and there is no provision for a public body to make an application for the establishment of a decision through a Central Authority unless its application for recognition or enforcement was refused due to a reservation made by the requested State. This seems in line with the approach of the European Court of Justice that while the legal rules should seek, as far as possible, to assist individual maintenance creditors in applications for establishment, public bodies are not at the same level of disadvantage.Footnote 58 The law to which the public body is subject governs the question of whether it is entitled to act in place of a person to whom maintenance is owed or to seek reimbursements of benefits provided to the debtor.Footnote 59 The public body may be required to furnish documentation demonstrating that it is so entitled and that the relevant payments have been made.Footnote 60
H. The Protocol
The mandate was to conclude one comprehensive Convention that covered all aspects found in previous instruments. Although many of those involved in the negotiation of the new instrument considered that it represented a unique opportunity to review, revise, and modernise the 1973 Hague (Applicable Law) Convention, insufficient compromise could be found between approaches towards applicable law questions to include applicable law rules as a mandatory part of the Convention.Footnote 61 The decision was made in May 2007 to put the rules relating to applicable law in a protocol, formally separate from the Convention.
The Protocol is a much shorter document, containing 30 articles in total, including the final clauses. The scope is different from that of the Convention, narrower in that it applies solely to questions of applicable law, but broader in that it applies to all maintenance obligations arising from a family relationship, parentage, marriage or affinity, including a maintenance obligation in respect of a child regardless of the marital status of the parents. The Protocol has universal application, applying even if the applicable law is that of a non-Contracting State.Footnote 62
The general rule found in the Protocol is also that found in the both the 1973 Hague (Applicable Law) Convention and the proposed Maintenance Regulation and states that maintenance obligations will be governed by the law of the creditor's State of habitual residence.Footnote 63
Also like the other instruments, the Protocol provides special rules for a number of different circumstances, although the circumstances involved and the rules applied differ. The first set of rules applies to maintenance obligations for parents towards their children, persons towards other persons under the age of 21 who are not their children or their spouses or ex-spouses, and children towards their parents.Footnote 64 If one of these categories of maintenance creditors applies to a court in the jurisdiction of the habitual residence of the debtor, then the laws of the forum apply.
The rest of this set of special rules seeks to ensure that such maintenance creditors will be entitled to obtain maintenance. They provide that if under the law of the State of the habitual residence of the creditor he or she is not entitled to obtain maintenance, then the law of the forum may be relied upon. The converse is true if a court in the State of the debtor's habitual residence was seised by the creditor, then if the law of the forum does not lead to any entitlement, the law of the creditor's State of habitual residence may be relied upon. If the creditor is not entitled under either of these laws, then the law of the State of the common nationality of the parties, if there is one, may be relied upon.Footnote 65 Under the 1973 Hague (Applicable Law) Convention,Footnote 66 any creditor within the scope of the Convention, apart from ex-spouses in certain instances,Footnote 67 could rely on the law of the State of their common nationality first, and then the internal law of the authority seised, to obtain maintenance obligations if this was not possible under the general rule. Special rules found in the proposed Maintenance RegulationFootnote 68 also apply to all maintenance obligations without limitation and the Commission proposal provides for an ultimate option of the application of the law of the State of a close connection rather than just common nationality.Footnote 69
The second set of special rules applies to spouses and ex-spouses.Footnote 70 The much criticised rule in the 1973 Hague (Applicable Law) Convention, that in a Contracting State where the parties were divorced the law applied to the divorce would also govern the maintenance obligations between the divorced spouses,Footnote 71 has been replaced with the position that the general rule shall not apply if one of the parties objects and the law of another State, in particular the State of their last common habitual residence, has a closer connection with the marriage. In such a case the law of that other State applies.
In all remaining types of maintenance, a special rule on defenceFootnote 72 specifies that the debtor may contest a claim from the creditor on the ground that there is no such obligation under both the law of the State of the habitual residence of the debtor, and the law of the State of the common nationality of the parties,Footnote 73 if there is one. This rule is taken from the 1973 Hague (Applicable Law) Convention.Footnote 74
Parties are allowed to designate the applicable law for either a particular proceedingFootnote 75 or for the maintenance obligation generally.Footnote 76 These are new provisions as there are no rules on party agreement on applicable law in either of the previous Hague Maintenance Conventions on applicable law. Only if both parties are adults of full capacity can they make an agreement designating the law applicable to the maintenance obligation generally, and they are limited to choosing one of four laws with which they have some connection.Footnote 77 This designation will not, however, apply to the question of whether the creditor may renounce his or her right to maintenance, which will be governed by the law of the State of the habitual residence of the creditor at the time of the designation. The designation will not apply at all if, unless the parties were fully informed and aware of the consequences of their designation, the law would lead to manifestly unfair or unreasonable consequences for any of the parties.
Like the 1973 Hague (Applicable Law) Convention,Footnote 78 the applicable law is responsible for determining questions of whether, to what extent and from whom the creditor can claim maintenance, who is entitled to institute maintenance proceedings,Footnote 79 prescription or limitation periods, and the extent of the obligation of the debtor when a public body seeks reimbursement of benefits provided for a creditor in place of maintenance.Footnote 80 In addition, like the proposed Maintenance Regulation,Footnote 81 the Protocol also specifies that the applicable law will determine the extent to which the creditor can claim retroactive maintenance, and the basis for calculation of the amount of maintenance and indexation.
The applicable law cannot override a mandatory rule found in Article 14 of the Protocol that the needs of the creditor and the resources of the debtor, as well as any compensation which the creditor was awarded in place of periodical maintenance payments shall be taken into account in determining the amount of maintenance.Footnote 82 In addition, the application of the law determined by the Protocol can be refused to the extent that it is contrary to the public policy of the forum.Footnote 83
The Protocol has also been made less complex than the new Convention by the absence of an ability to modify its application by way of reservation or declaration.Footnote 84 This is also a change from the 1973 Hague (Applicable Law) Convention and indicates both the general acceptance of the rules contained in the Protocol and recognition of its optional nature.
I. Conclusion
The success of the Hague Conference in producing a comprehensive and inclusive instrument is somewhat reflected in its complexity. While this is unlikely to diminish its potential for wide ratification,Footnote 85 it will require the investment of considerable resources to successfully implement, not least in training officials and lawyers in Contracting States. However, once the system is fully functional it should result in much simplified procedures for the maintenance applicants, the end users of the Convention.