THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY
--------------- |
SOCIALIST REPUBLIC OF VIET NAM
Independence - Freedom – Happiness -------------- |
No. 24/2004/QH11
|
Hanoi, June 15, 2004
|
CODE
Pursuant
to the 1992 Constitution of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam, which was
amended and supplemented under Resolution No. 51/2001/QH10 of December 25, 2001
of the X th National Assembly, the 10th session.
This Law provides for the order and procedures for settling civil cases and matters and enforcing civil judgments.
This Law provides for the order and procedures for settling civil cases and matters and enforcing civil judgments.
Part One
GENERAL PROVISIONS
Chapter
1
TASK AND EFFECT OF THE CIVIL PROCEDURE CODE
Article
1.-
Regulation scope and task of the Civil Procedure Code
The Civil Procedure Code provides for the
basic principles in civil proceedings; the order and procedures for initiating
lawsuits at courts to settle cases of civil, marriage and family, business,
trade and labor disputes (hereinafter referred collectively to as civil cases)
and the order and procedures to request courts to settle matters regarding
civil, marriage and family, business, trade or labor requirements (hereinafter
referred collectively to as civil matters); the order and procedures for
settlement of civil cases, civil matters (hereinafter referred collectively to
as civil cases and matters) at courts; the civil judgment enforcement; the
tasks, powers and responsibilities of the procedure-conducting agencies, the
procedure-conducting persons; the rights and obligations of persons
participating in civil proceedings and of relevant individuals, State agencies,
people's armed force units, economic organizations, political organizations,
socio-political organizations, professional-socio-political organizations,
social organizations, socio-professional organizations (hereinafter referred
collectively to as agencies, organizations) in order to ensure the speedy,
accurate, judicious and lawful settlement of civil cases and matters.
The Civil Procedure Code contributes to the
protection of the socialist regime, enhances the socialist legislation,
protects the interests of the State, and legitimate rights and interests of
individuals, agencies and/or organizations; educates people to seriously abide
by law.
Article
2.-
Effect of the Civil Procedure Code
1. The Civil Procedure Code shall apply to
all civil proceedings throughout the territory of the Socialist Republic of
Vietnam.
2. The Civil Procedure Code shall apply to
all civil proceedings conducted by consular offices of Vietnam in foreign
countries.
3. The Civil Procedure Code shall apply to
the settlement of civil cases and matters involving foreign element(s); where
international treaties which Vietnam has signed or acceded to 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 which
the Socialist Republic of Vietnam has signed or acceded to, the civil cases or
matters related to such individuals, agencies and/or organizations shall be
settled through the diplomatic channel.
Chapter
II
BASIC PRINCIPLES
Article
3.-
Assurance of the socialist legislation in civil procedures
All civil procedural activities of
procedure-conducting persons, civil procedure-participants, 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
Individuals, agencies and organizations
defined by this Code shall have the right to institute civil cases, request the
resolution of civil matters at competent courts in order to protect the
legitimate rights and interests of their own or of others.
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, request competent courts to
settle civil cases or matters. The courts shall only accept for settlement
civil cases and/or matters when they receive lawsuit petitions and/or written
requests from the involved parties and shall settle the cases and/or matters
only within the scope of such lawsuit petitions or written requests.
2. In the course of settling civil cases
and/or matters, the involved parties shall have the right to terminate or
change their requests or voluntarily reach agreement with one another, which is
not contrary to law and social ethics.
Article
6.-
Supply of evidences and proofs in civil procedures
1. The involved parties shall have the right
and obligation to supply evidences to courts and prove that their requests are
well grounded and lawful.
Individuals, agencies or organizations that
initiate lawsuits or file their requests to protect the legitimate rights and
interests of other persons shall have the right and obligation to supply
evidences and to prove like the involved parties.
2. The courts shall only verify or gather
evidences in the cases prescribed by this Code.
Article
7.-
Responsibility of competent individuals, agencies and organizations to supply
evidences
Individuals, agencies and organizations
shall, within the scope of their tasks and powers, be obliged to provide the
involved parties and courts with case evidences currently being under their
possession or management at the requests of the involved parties and/or courts;
in cases where they cannot do so, they must notify such to the involved parties
and/or courts in writing and clearly state the reasons therefore.
Article
8.-
Equality in rights and obligations in civil procedures
All citizens are equal before law and courts
regardless of their nationalities, sexes, social status, beliefs, religions,
educational levels and occupations. All agencies and organizations are equal
regardless of their forms of organization, ownership and other matters.
The involved parties are equal in rights and
obligations in civil procedures; the courts have the responsibility to create
conditions for them to exercise their rights and perform their obligations.
Article
9.-
Ensuring the involved parties' right to defense
The involved parties shall have the right to
defend by themselves or ask lawyers or other persons who satisfy the conditions
prescribed by this Code to defend their legitimate rights and interests.
The courts have the responsibility to provide
assurance for the involved parties to exercise their right to defense.
Article
10.-
Conciliation in civil procedures
The courts have the responsibility to conduct
conciliation and create favorable conditions for the involved parties to reach
agreement with one another on the resolution of civil cases or matters under
the provisions of this Code.
Article
11.-
Participation of people's jurors in adjudication of civil cases
The adjudication of civil cases shall be
participated by people's jurors as provided for by this Code. Upon trials
people's jurors are equal in powers to judges.
Article
12.-
Judges and people's jurors are independent in trial and only comply with law
Upon trial of civil cases, judges and
people's jurors shall be independent and only comply with law.
All acts of hindering judges and people's
jurors from performing their tasks are strictly prohibited.
Article
13.-
Responsibilities of civil procedure-conducting agencies, and persons
1. Civil procedure-conducting agencies and
persons must respect the people and submit to the people's supervision.
2. Civil procedure-conducting agencies and
persons shall be held responsible before law for the performance of their tasks
and powers. Where the civil procedure-conducting persons commit law violation
acts, they shall, depending on the nature and seriousness of their violations,
be disciplined or examined for penal liability according to law provisions.
3. Civil procedure-conducting agencies and
persons must keep State secrets, work secrets as prescribed by law; preserve
the nation's fine customs and practices, keep professional secrets, business
secrets, personal secrets of the involved parties at their legitimate requests.
4. If civil procedure-conducting persons
commit illegal acts, causing damage to individuals, agencies and/or
organizations, the courts must pay damages to the victims and the civil
procedure-conducting persons shall have to reimburse the courts according to
law provisions.
Article
14.-
Collective trial by courts
A court shall conduct the collective trial of
civil cases and make decisions by majority.
Article
15.-
Public trials
1. The court trial of civil cases shall be
carried out publicly, anyone can attend the trials, except for cases prescribed
by this Code.
2. In special cases where it is necessary to
keep the State secrets or preserve the nation's fine customs and practices,
keep the professional secrets, business secrets or personal secrets of
individuals at legitimate requests of the involved parties, the courts shall
conduct trials behind closed doors but must publicly pronounce the judgments.
Article
16.-
Ensuring impartiality of persons that conduct or participate in civil
procedures
Chief judges, judges, people's jurors, court
clerks, procuracy chairmen, prosecutors, interpreters and/or expert-witnesses
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.
Article
17.-
Following the two-level adjudication regime
1. The courts shall follow the regime of
two-level adjudication
The courts' first-instance judgments or
decisions can be appealed or protested against under the provisions of this
Code.
First-instance judgments or decisions which
are not appealed or protested 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 or protested against, the
cases must undergo appellate trials. The appellate judgments or decisions shall
be legally effective.
2. The courts' first-instance judgments or
decisions which have already taken legal effect but have been detected with law
violations or new details shall be reviewed according to the cassation or
reopening procedures under the provisions of this Code.
Article
18.-
Supervision of trials
Superior courts supervise the adjudication by
subordinate courts, the Supreme People's Court supervises the adjudication by
courts of all levels in order to ensure a strict and uniform application of
law.
Article
19.-
Assurance of the effect of courts' judgments, decisions
Legally effective judgments, decisions of
courts must be enforced and observed by all citizens, agencies and
organizations. Individuals, agencies and organizations that have the obligation
to execute the courts' judgments, decisions must strictly execute them.
Within the scope of their respective tasks
and powers, the People's 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.
Article
20.-
Spoken and written language used in civil procedures
Spoken and written language to be used in
civil procedures is the Vietnamese.
Participants in civil procedures may use the
voices and scripts of their ethnic groups and in this case interpreters are
required.
Article
21.-
Supervising the law observance in civil procedures
1. The People's Procuracies shall supervise
the law observance in civil procedures and exercise the rights to request,
petition or protest according to law provisions in order to ensure lawful and
timely resolution of civil cases and matters.
2. The People's Procuracies shall participate
in court sessions for cases with evidences collected by courts but complained
about by the involved parties, for civil matters falling under the courts'
jurisdiction and for civil cases and matters with courts' judgments or
decisions protested against by the People's Procuracies.
Article
22.-
Courts' responsibility to transfer documents and papers
1. The courts shall have the responsibility
to transfer directly or via postal service their judgments, decisions, summons,
invitations and other relevant documents to the participants in the civil
procedures according to the provisions of this Code.
2. Where the courts cannot do so, the
People's Committees of communes, wards or district townships (hereinafter
called collectively commune-level People's Committees) where such persons
reside or the agencies or organizations where they work shall have the
responsibility to transfer the judgments, decisions, summons, invitations and
other relevant papers of courts to such persons when so requested by courts and
must notify the courts of the results thereof.
Article
23.-
Participation of individuals, agencies, organizations in civil procedures
Individuals, agencies and organizations shall
have the right and obligation to participate in civil procedures according to
the provisions of this Code, and contribute to the lawful and timely resolution
of the civil cases and matters at courts.
Article
24.-
Assurance of the right to complaints and denunciations in civil procedures
Individuals, agencies and organizations shall
have the right to complain about, individuals shall have the right to denounce,
illegal acts of persons conducting the civil procedures or of any individuals,
agencies or organizations 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.
Chapter
III
COURT'S JURISDICTION
Section
1. CIVIL CASES AND MATTERS FALLING UNDER THE COURTS' JURISDICTION
Article
25.-
Civil disputes falling under the courts' jurisdiction
1. Disputes over the Vietnamese nationality
among individuals;
2. Disputes over property ownership;
3. Disputes over civil contracts;
4. Disputes over intellectual property
rights, technology transfers, except for the cases prescribed in Clause 2,
Article 29 of this Code;
5. Disputes over property inheritance;
6. Disputes over compensation for
non-contractual damage;
7. Disputes over the land use right and
properties affixed to land under the land legislation;
8. Disputes relating to the professional
press operation under law provisions;
9. Other civil disputes as stipulated by law.
Article
26.-
Civil requests falling under the courts' jurisdiction
1. The request to declare a person losing
his/her civil act capacity or having his/her civil act capacity restricted; or
to revoke a decision declaring a person losing his/her civil act capacity or
having restricted civil act capacity;
2. The request to announce the search of
persons who are absent from their residential places and the management of
their properties;
3. The request to declare a person missing;
or to revoke a decision to declare a person missing;
4. The request to declare a person deceased;
or to revoke a decision to declare a person deceased;
5. The request to recognize and enforce in
Vietnam 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 required
to be enforced in Vietnam;
6. Other civil requests as stipulated by law.
Article
27.-
Marriage and family-related disputes falling under the courts' jurisdiction
1. Divorces, disputes over child rearing or
property division upon divorces.
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. Other marriage-and family-related disputes
stipulated by law.
Article
28.-
Marriage-and family-related requests falling under the courts' jurisdiction
1. The requests to revoke illegal marriages;
2. The requests to recognize voluntary
divorces, child custody or property division upon divorces;
3. The request to recognize an agreement on
change of post-divorce child custodian;
4. The request to restrict rights of a father
or mother towards a minor child or his/her right to see the child after
divorce;
5. The request to terminate the adoption of
children;
6. The request to recognize and enforce in
Vietnam foreign courts' judgments or decisions on marriage and family; or not
to recognize foreign courts' judgments or decisions on marriage and family
which are not required to be enforced in Vietnam;
7. Other marriage-and family-related requests
stipulated by law.
Article
29.-
Business, trade disputes falling under the courts' jurisdiction
1. Disputes arising from business or trade
activities among individuals and/or organizations with business registration,
which are all for the purpose of profits, including:
a) Purchase and sale of goods;
b) Provision of services;
c) Distribution;
d) Commercial representation and/or agency;
e) Consignment;
f) Renting, leasing, hire-purchase;
g) Construction;
h) Consulting, engineering;
i) Cargo or passenger transportation by rail,
road, or inland waterway;
j) Cargo or passenger transportation by air
or sea;
k) Purchase and sale of shares, bonds and
other valuable papers;
l) Investment, financing, banking;
m) Insurance;
n) Exploration and exploitation.
2. Disputes over intellectual property rights
or technology transfers among individuals or organizations, which are all for
the purposes of profits.
3. Disputes between a company and its members
or among members of a company regarding the establishment, operation,
dissolution, merger, consolidation, division, separation, organizational
transformation of the company.
4. Other business, trade disputes prescribed
by law.
Article
30.-
Business or trade requests falling under the courts' jurisdiction
1. The requests related to the resolution of
disputes by Vietnamese commercial arbitrators under law provisions on
commercial arbitration;
2. The requests to recognize and enforce in
Vietnam foreign courts' judgments or decisions on business or commercial
matters, or not to recognize foreign courts' judgments or decisions on business
or commercial matters, which are not required to be enforced in Vietnam;
3. The requests to recognize and enforce in
Vietnam foreign arbitrators' awards on business or commercial matters;
4. Other business or commercial requests
prescribed by law.
Article
31.-
Labor disputes falling under the courts' jurisdiction
1. Individual labor disputes between
employees and employers, which cannot be conciliated by grassroots labor
conciliation boards or labor conciliators of labor State management agencies of
urban districts, rural districts, provincial capitals, provincial towns or
which have not been settled within the time limit prescribed by law, except for
the following disputes which must not necessarily be conciliated at the
grassroots level:
a) Disputes over labor discipline in the form
of dismissal or over cases of unilateral termination of labor contracts;
b) Disputes over damage compensation between
employees and employers; over financial support upon termination of labor
contracts;
c) Disputes between household servants and
their employers;
d) Disputes over social insurance under the
provisions of labor legislation;
e) Disputes over damage compensation between
laborers and labor exporters.
2. The collective labor disputes between
labor collectives and employers, which have been resolved by labor arbitration
boards of provinces or centrally-run cities but the labor collectives or
employers disagree with the decisions of the labor arbitration boards,
including:
a) Disputes over rights and/or interests
related to job, wages, income and other working conditions;
b) Disputes over the performance of
collective labor accords;
c) Disputes over the rights to set up, join,
or operation of, trade union.
3. Other labor disputes prescribed by law.
Article
32.-
Labor requests falling under the courts' jurisdiction
1. The request to recognize and enforce in
Vietnam foreign courts' labor judgments or decisions, or not to recognize
foreign courts' labor judgments or decisions which are not required to be
enforced in Vietnam;
2. The request to recognize and enforce in
Vietnam labor awards of foreign arbitrators;
3. Other labor requests prescribed by law.
Section
2. JURISDICTION OF COURTS OF DIFFERENT LEVELS
Article
33.-
Jurisdiction of the people's courts of rural districts, urban districts,
provincial capitals, provincial towns
1. The people's courts of rural districts,
urban districts, provincial capitals, provincial towns (hereinafter referred
collectively to as district-level people's courts) shall have the jurisdiction
to settle according to first-instance procedures the following disputes:
a) Civil disputes over marriage and family,
prescribed in Articles 25 and 27 of this Code;
b) Business, trade disputes prescribed at
Points a, b, c, d, e, f, g, h and i of Clause 1, Article 29 of this Code;
c) Labor disputes prescribed in Clause 1,
Article 31 of this Code.
2. The district-level people's courts shall
have the jurisdiction to resolve the following requests:
a) Civil requests prescribed in Clauses 1, 2,
3 and 4 of Article 26 of this Code;
b) Marriage and family-related requests
prescribed in Clauses 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 of Article 28 of this Code.
3. Disputes and requests prescribed in
Clauses 1 and 2 of this Article, which involve parties or properties in foreign
countries or which must be judicially entrusted to Vietnamese consulates
overseas or to foreign courts, shall not fall under the jurisdiction of the
district level people's courts.
Article
34.-
Jurisdiction of the people's courts of provinces or centrally-run cities
1. The people's courts of provinces or
centrally-run cities (hereinafter referred collectively to as the
provincial-level people's courts) shall have the jurisdiction to settle
according to first-instance procedures the following cases and matters:
a) Civil, marriage- and family-related,
business, trade or labor disputes prescribed in Articles 25, 27, 29 and 31 of
this Code, except for disputes falling under the jurisdiction of the
district-level people's courts as provided for in Clause 1, Article 33 of this Code;
b) Civil, marriage-and family-related,
business, trade or labor requests prescribed in Articles 26, 28, 30 and 32 of
this Code, except for requests falling under the jurisdiction of the
district-level people's courts as prescribed in Clause 2, Article 33 of this
Code;
c) Disputes and requests prescribed in Clause
3, Article 33 of this Code.
2. The provincial-level people's courts shall
have the jurisdiction to resolve according to first-instance procedures civil
cases and matters falling under the jurisdiction of the district-level people's
courts as provided for in Article 33 of this Code, which are taken up by
provincial-level people's courts for settlement.
Article
35.-
Territorial jurisdiction of courts
1. Territorial jurisdiction of courts to settle
civil cases shall be determined as follows:
a) The courts of the localities where the
defendants reside or work, if the defendants are individuals, or where the
defendants are headquartered, if the defendants are agencies or organizations,
shall have the jurisdiction to settle according to first-instance procedures
civil, marriage- and family-related, business, trade or labor disputes
prescribed in Articles 25, 27, 29 and 31 of this Code;
b) The involved parties shall have the right
to agree with each other in writing to request the courts of the localities
where the plaintiffs reside or work, if the plaintiffs are individuals, or
where the plaintiffs are headquartered, if they are agencies or organizations,
to settle civil, marriage and family-related, business, trade or labor disputes
prescribed in Articles 25, 27, 29 and 31 of this Code;
c) The courts of the areas where exists
immoveables shall have the jurisdiction to settle disputes over such
immoveables.
2. Territorial jurisdiction of courts to
settle civil matters shall be determined as follows:
a) The requested courts of the areas where
persons are to be declared losing their civil act capacity or having restricted
civil act capacity reside or work shall have the jurisdiction to resolve such
requests;
b) The requested courts of the areas where
persons absent from their residential place are to be announced for search or
to be declared missing or dead reside for the last time, shall have the
jurisdiction to settle requests for announcement of the search for persons
absent from their residential places and management of such persons' properties
or requests for declaring a person missing or dead;
c) The courts which have issued decisions to
declare persons missing or dead shall have the jurisdiction to resolve requests
to revoke their decisions;
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, if judgment debtors are
individuals or where the judgment debtors are headquartered, if they are
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 requests to recognize and enforce foreign courts'
civil, marriage and family, business, trade or labor judgments or decisions in
Vietnam;
e) The courts of the areas where the request
senders reside or work, if they are individuals, or where the request senders
are headquartered, if they are agencies or organizations, shall have the
jurisdiction to settle requests not to recognize foreign courts' civil,
marriage and family, business, trade or labor judgments or decisions, which are
not required to be enforced in Vietnam;
f) The courts of the areas where the persons
who are obliged to execute awards of foreign arbitrators reside or work, if the
judgment debtors are individuals or where the judgment debtors are
headquartered, if they are agencies or organizations or where exists the
property relating to the enforcement of foreign arbitrators' awards, shall have
the jurisdiction to resolve requests to recognize and enforce in Vietnam awards
of foreign arbitrators;
g) The courts of the areas where illegal
marriages are registered shall have the jurisdiction to resolve requests to
revoke such illegal marriages;
h) The court of the area where one of the
parties to a voluntary divorce, child custody or property division resides or
works shall have the jurisdiction to resolve the request to recognize the
voluntary divorce, child custody, property division upon divorce;
i) The court of the area where one of the
parties that requests the court to recognize their agreement on change of
post-divorce child custodian resides or works shall have the jurisdiction to
resolve that request;
j) The court of the area where one parent of
a minor child resides or works shall have the jurisdiction to resolve a request
to restrict rights of the father or mother towards the minor child or his/her
right to see the child after the divorce;
k) The court of the area where an adoptive
parent or adopted child resides or works shall have the jurisdiction to resolve
a request to terminate the child adoption;
l) The courts' territorial jurisdiction to
resolve requests relating to the settlement of disputes by the Vietnamese
commercial arbitrators shall comply with law provisions on commercial
arbitration.
Article
36.-
Jurisdiction of courts selected by plaintiffs or requesters
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:
a) If the plaintiffs do not know where the
defendants reside or work or where their head-offices are located, they may ask
the courts of the areas where the defendants last reside or work or where the
head-offices of the defendants are last located or where the defendants'
properties are located to settle cases;
b) If disputes arise from the operations of a
branch of an organization, the plaintiff may ask the court of the area where
the organization's head-office is located or where its branch is located to
settle them;
c) If defendants do not have residence
places, work places or head-offices in Vietnam or the cases related to disputes
over alimonies, the plaintiffs may ask the courts of the areas where they
reside or work to settle the cases;
d) If disputes are over compensation for
non-contractual damage, the plaintiffs may ask the courts of the areas where
they reside, work or are headquartered or where the damage is caused to settle
them;
e) If disputes are over compensation for
damage or allowance upon termination of labor contracts, over social insurance,
the rights and/or interests in relation to job, wages, income and other working
conditions, for the laborers, the plaintiffs being laborers may ask the courts
of the areas where they reside or work to settle them;
f) If disputes arise from the employment of
labor by sub-contractors or mediators, the plaintiffs may ask the courts of the
areas where their actual employers reside, work or are headquartered or where
the sub-contractors or the mediators reside or work to settle them;
g) If disputes arise from contractual
relations, the plaintiffs may ask the courts of the areas where the contracts
are performed to settle them;
h) If the defendants reside, work or are
headquartered in different places, the plaintiffs may ask the court of the area
where one of the defendants resides or works or is headquartered to settle
them;
i) If disputes are over immoveables which
exist in different localities, the plaintiffs may request the court of the area
where one of such immoveables exist to settle them.
2. The requesters may select courts to settle
their marriage and family-related requests in the following cases:
a) For civil requests prescribed in Clauses
1, 2, 3 and 4 of Article 26 of this Code, the requesters may ask the courts of
the areas where they reside, work or are headquartered to resolve them;
b) For requests to revoke illegal marriages
as provided in Clause 1, Article 28 of this Code, the requesters may ask the
courts of the areas where the illegal marriages are registered to resolve them;
c) For requests to restrict rights of fathers
or mothers towards their minor children or their right to visit the children
after the divorces, the requesters may ask the courts of the areas where the
children reside to resolve them.
Article
37.-
Transferring civil cases or matters to other courts; settlement of disputes
over jurisdiction
1. If a court has accepted a civil case or
matter which does not fall within its jurisdiction, it shall issue a decision
to transfer the civil case or matter dossier to a competent court and cross out
the case or matter in its acceptance book. Such decision must be immediately
sent to all involved parties, concerned individuals, agencies and/or
organizations.
The involved parties, concerned individuals,
agencies and/or organizations shall have the right to complain about such
decision within three working days as from the date of receipt of the decision.
Within three working days from the date of receipt of a complaint, the chief
judge of the court that issued the decision to transfer the civil case or
matter must resolve the complaint.
2. Any dispute over the jurisdiction between
district-level people's courts within a province shall be settled by the chief
judge of the provincial people's court.
3. Any dispute over the jurisdiction between
district-level people's courts of different provinces or centrally-run cities or
between provincial people's courts shall be settled by the chief judge of the
Supreme People's Court.
Article
38.-
Merging or separating cases
1. A court may merge two or more cases which
it has separately accepted into a single case for resolution if merger and
resolution in the same case ensure the law compliance.
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 case merger or separation prescribed
in Clauses 1 and 2 of this Article, the courts which have accepted the cases
must issue decisions and send them immediately to the involved parties and the
procuracies of the same level.
Chapter
IV
CIVIL PROCEDURE-CONDUCTING AGENCIES, CIVIL
PROCEDURE -CONDUCTING PERSONS AND REPLACEMENT OF CIVIL PROCEDURE -CONDUCTING
PERSONS
Article
39.-
Civil procedure-conducting agencies, civil procedure-conducting persons
1. The civil procedure-conducting agencies
include:
a) The people's courts;
b) The people's procuracies.
2. The civil procedure-conducting persons
include:
a) The chief judges, judges, people's jurors
and court clerks;
b) Chairmen of procuracies, procurators.
Article
40.-
Tasks and powers of the courts' chief judges
1. The court's chief judge shall have the
following tasks and powers:
a) To organize the resolution of civil cases
and matters falling under the court's jurisdiction;
b) To decide on the assignment of judges to
resolve civil cases or matters, people's jurors to participate in trial panels
to hear civil cases; and to decide on the assignment of court clerks to conduct
procedures for civil cases and/or matters;
c) To decide on the replacement of judges,
people's jurors, 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;
e) To issue decisions and conduct civil
proceedings under the provisions of this Code;
f) To settle complaints and/or denunciations
under the provisions of this Code;
g) To protest according to the cessation or
reopening procedures against legally-effective court judgments or decisions
according to the provisions of this Code.
2. When the chief judge is absent, a
deputy-chief judge shall be authorized by the chief judge to perform the chief
judge's tasks and powers prescribed in Clause 1 of this Article. The
deputy-chief judge shall be answerable to the chief judge for the assigned
tasks.
Article
41.-
Tasks and powers of judges
1. To compile case files.
2. To decide to apply, change or cancel the
provisional emergency measures.
3. To decide to stop or suspend the
resolution of civil cases or matters.
4. To conduct conciliation for the involved
parties to reach mutual agreement on the resolution of the cases under the
provisions of this Code; to issue decisions recognizing the agreement of the
involved parties.
5. To decide to bring civil cases to court
for trial, or bring civil matters for resolution.
6. To decide to summon the participants in
court sessions.
7. To participate in adjudicating civil cases
and resolving civil matters.
8. To conduct other proceedings when
resolving civil cases and/or matters according to the provisions of this Code.
Article
42.-
Tasks and powers of people's jurors
1. To study case files prior to the opening
of court sessions.
2. To request the chief judges, judges to
issue necessary decisions according to their respective competence.
3. To participate in adjudicating civil
cases.
4. To conduct proceedings and vote on issues
falling within the trial panels' jurisdiction when adjudicating civil cases.
Article
43.-
Tasks and powers of court clerks
1. To make necessary professional
preparations prior to the opening of court sessions.
2. To announce the rules of court sessions.
3. To report to the trial panels on the list
of those summoned to court sessions.
4. To write minutes of court sessions.
5. To conduct other proceedings according to
the provisions of this Code.
Article
44.-
Tasks and powers of procuracy chairmen
1. When performing the tasks of supervising
the law observance in the civil proceedings, the procuracy chairmen 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 proceedings, to participate in court sessions for
adjudication of civil cases, sessions for resolution of civil matters according
to the provisions of this Code.
c) To inspect activities of supervising the
law observance in proceedings performed by procurators;
d) To decide on replacement of procurators;
e) To protest according to appellate,
cassation or reopening procedures against courts judgments or decisions
according to the provisions of this Code;
f) To settle complaints, denunciations
according to the provisions of this Code.
2. When the procuracy chairman is absent, a
deputy-procuracy chairman shall be authorized by the chairman to perform
his/her tasks and powers prescribed in Clause 1 of this Article. The deputy
chairman is answerable to the chairman for the assigned tasks.
Article
45.-
Tasks and powers of procurators
When assigned to supervise the law observance
in civil proceedings, the procurators shall have the following tasks and
powers:
1. To supervise the law observance in the
settlement of civil cases, civil matters by courts;
2. To supervise the law observance by
participants in the procedures;
3. To supervise court judgments, decisions;
4. To participate in court sessions for
adjudication of civil cases, sessions for resolution of matters according to
the provisions of this Code and state the procuracies' opinions on settlement
of civil cases and/or matters;
5. To perform other tasks and powers falling
within the procuracies' jurisdiction according to the procuracy chairmen's
assignment.
Article
46.-
Cases where civil procedure-conducting persons must refuse to conduct the
procedures or be replaced
Civil procedure-conducting persons must
refuse to conduct the procedures or be replaced in the following cases:
1. They are concurrently the involved
parties, the representatives or relatives of the involved parties;
2. They have participated in the capacity as
defense counsels of the legitimate rights and interests of involved parties,
witnesses, expert-witnesses or interpreters in the same cases;
3. There are clear grounds to believe that
they may not be impartial in performing their tasks.
Article
47.-
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
46 of this Code;
2. They are in the same trial panel and have
a close relationship with one another;
3. They have participated in the
first-instance, appellate, cassation or re-opening trials of such cases, except
where they are members of the Judges' Council of the Supreme People's Court or
the Judges' Committees of the provincial-level people's courts, they may
participate in adjudicating a case many times according to the cassation or
reopening procedures;
4. They have acted as procedure-conducting
persons in such cases in the capacity as procurator or court clerk.
Article
48.-
Replacing procurators
Procurators must refuse to conduct civil
procedures or be replaced in the following cases:
1. In one of the cases prescribed in Article
46 of this Code;
2. They have acted as procedure-conducting
persons in the same case in the capacity as judge, people's juror, procurator
or court clerk.
Article
49.-
Replacing court clerks
Court clerks must refuse to conduct civil
procedures or be replaced in the following cases:
1. In one of the cases prescribed in Article
46 of this Code;
2. They have acted as procedure-conducting
persons in the same case in the capacity as judge, people's juror, procurator
or court clerk.
Article
50.-
Procedures for refusing to conduct civil procedures or requesting to replace
procedure-conducting persons.
1. The refusal to conduct the procedures or
the request the replacement of procedure-conducting persons before the opening
of court sessions must be made in writing, clearly stating the reason(s) and
grounds therefor.
2. The refusal to conduct the procedures or
the request the replacement of procedure-conducting persons at court sessions
must be recorded in the minutes of the court sessions.
Article
51.-
Deciding on the replacement of procedure-conducting persons.
1. Prior to the opening of court sessions,
the replacement of judges, people's jurors and/or court clerks shall be decided
by the courts' chief judges; if the to be-replaced judges are courts' chief
judges, their replacement shall be decided by the chief judges of the immediate
superior courts.
Prior to the opening of court sessions, the
replacement of procurators shall be decided by the chairmen of the procuracies
of the same level; if the to be-replaced procurators are procuracy chairmen,
their replacement shall be decided by the chairmen of the immediate superior
procuracies.
2. At court sessions, the replacement of
judges, people's jurors, court clerks or procurators shall be decided by the
trial panels after listening to the opinions of the persons requested to be
replaced. The trial panels shall discuss the matter at the deliberation rooms
and make decisions by majority.
In cases where judges, people's jurors, court
clerks and/or prosecutors must be replaced, the trial panels shall issue
decisions to postpone the court sessions. The appointment of other judges,
people's jurors and/or court clerks as the replacement shall be decided by the
courts' chief judges. If the to be-replaced persons are the courts' chief
judges, their replacement shall be decided by the chief judges of the immediate
superior courts. The appointment of procurators as the replacement shall be
decided by the chairmen of the procuracies of the same level; if the to
be-replaced procurators are chairmen of the procuracies of the same level,
their replacement shall be decided by the chairmen of the immediate superior
procuracies.
Chapter
V
COMPOSITION OF PANELS FOR RESOLUTION OF CIVIL
CASES AND MATTERS
Article
52.-
Composition of the panel for first-instance trial of civil cases
The panel for first-instance trial of civil
cases shall be composed of one judge and two people's jurors. In special cases,
the first-instance trial panel may consist of two judges and three people's
jurors.
Article
53.-
Composition of a panel for appellate trial of civil cases
The panel for appellate trial of civil cases
shall be composed of three judges.
Article
54.-
Composition of the panel for cassation or reopening trial of civil cases
1. The cassation or reopening trial panels of
the provincial-level people's courts shall be the Judges' Committees of the
provincial-level people's courts.
When the Judges' Committees of the
provincial-level people's courts conduct the cassation or reopening trials of
legally effective judgments or decisions, at least two-thirds of the total
number of their respective members must participate therein.
2. The cassation or reopening trial panel of
a specialized tribunal of the Supreme People's Court is composed of three
judges.
3. The cassation or reopening trial panel of
the Supreme People's Court shall be the Judges' Council of the Supreme People's
Court.
When the Judges' Council of the Supreme
People's Court conducts the cassation or reopening trials of legally effective
judgments or decisions, at least two-thirds of the total number of its members
must participate therein.
Article
55.-
Arrangements for resolution of civil matters
1. The civil, marriage and family, business,
trade or labor requests prescribed in Clause 5 of Article 26, Clause 6 of
Article 28, Clauses 2 and 3 of Article 30, and Article 32 of this Code or the
appeals, protests against civil matter-settling decisions shall be settled by a
board of three judges.
2. The civil, marriage and family, business,
trade or labor requests 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 requests prescribed in Clause 1, Article 30 of this Code shall comply
with law provisions on commercial arbitration.
Chapter
VI
PARTICIPANTS IN CIVIL PROCEDURES
Section
1. INVOLVED PARTIES IN CIVIL CASES
Article
56.-
Involved parties in civil cases
1. The involved parties in civil cases mean
individuals, agencies and/or organizations, including the plaintiffs, the
defendants and the persons with related interests and obligations.
2. The plaintiff in a civil case is the
person that initiates lawsuit or the person for whom the other individual,
agency or organization prescribed by this Code initiates the lawsuit to request
the court to resolve the civil case when he/she/it holds that the legitimate
rights and interests of that person have been infringed upon.
Agencies and organizations prescribed by this
Code, which institute civil cases 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 case is the
person against whom the plaintiff initiates a lawsuit or the other individual,
agency or organization prescribed by this Code initiates a lawsuit to request
the court to resolve the civil case when he/she/it 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 cases are those who neither initiate lawsuits nor are
sued, but the resolution of the civil cases is related to their interests
and/or obligations and, therefore they themselves request 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 case 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
57.-
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 individual, agency and organization shall have the same civil
procedure law capacity in requesting the court to protect his/her/its
legitimate rights and interests.
2. The civil procedure act capacity means the
ability to exercise one's own rights and obligations by him/herself in civil
procedures or authorize his/her representative to participate in civil
procedures.
3. The involved parties being persons aged
full 18 years or older shall have full civil procedure act capacity, except for
persons losing their civil act capacity and persons having restricted civil act
capacity or except otherwise provided for by law.
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 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 legitimate
rights and interests at courts shall be performed by their lawful
representatives.
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 protection of their legitimate rights and interests 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
58.-
Rights and obligations of the involved parties.
1. The involved parties shall have equal
rights and obligations when participating in civil procedures.
2. When participating in civil procedures,
the involved parties shall have the following rights and obligations:
a) To supply evidences and proofs to defend
their legitimate rights and interests;
b) To request individuals, agencies and/or
organizations that are keeping, managing evidences to supply such evidences to
them for submission to courts;
c) To request courts to verify, gather
evidences of the cases, which they cannot do by themselves or request courts to
summon witnesses, to ask for expertise, valuation; to complain with the
procuracies about evidences already verified, collected by courts at requests
of other involved parties;
d) To read and take notes, photocopy
documents and/or evidences produced by other involved parties or collected by
courts;
e) To request courts to decide on the application
of provisional emergency measures;
f) To reach agreement with one another on the
resolution of cases; to participate in conciliation conducted by courts;
g) To receive regular notices for the
exercise of their rights and obligations;
h) To protect by themselves or ask other
persons to protect their legitimate rights and interests;
i) To participate in court sessions;
j) To request the replacement of civil
procedure conducting persons or participants in civil procedures under the
provisions of this Code;
k) To propose to courts matters which need to
be inquired from other persons; to confront each other or witnesses;
l) To argue at court sessions;
m) To be provided with extracts of court
judgments and/or decisions;
n) To appeal or complain about court
judgments and/or decisions according to the provisions of this Code;
o) To detect and notify to persons competent
to protest the grounds for protest according to cassation or reopening
procedures against courts' legally effective judgments and/or decisions;
p) To be present under courts' writ of summon
and abide by courts' decisions during the time of resolving of the cases;
q) To respect courts, and strictly observe
the court's rules;
r) To advance court fees and charges as
stipulated by laws;
s) To strictly abide by the legally effective
judgments and/or decisions of courts;
t) Other rights and obligations prescribed by
law.
Article
59.-
Rights and obligations of the plaintiffs
1. The plaintiffs shall have the following
rights and obligations:
a) The involved parties' rights and
obligations prescribed in Article 58 of this Code;
b) To withdraw part or whole of their lawsuit
claims; or modify the contents of lawsuit claims;
c) To request courts to let persons with
related rights and/or interests to participate in the procedures;
d) To request the court to suspend the case
resolution.
2. A plaintiff who has been duly summoned
twice by the court but is still absent shall be deemed to have given up his/her
lawsuit.
Article
60.-
Rights and obligations of the defendants
1. The defendants shall have the following
rights and obligations:
a) The involved parties' rights and
obligations prescribed in Article 58 of this Code;
b) To accept part or whole of the plaintiffs'
claims or to reject the claims of the plaintiffs;
c) To make counter-claims against the
plaintiffs if they are related to the plaintiffs' claims or set off the
obligations claimed by the plaintiffs;
d) To be notified by courts of the lawsuits
against them.
2. If a defendant has been duly summoned twice
but is still absent, the court shall conduct the trial in his/her absence.
Article
61.-
Rights and obligations of the persons with related rights and/or obligations
1. Persons with related rights and/or
obligations shall have the following rights and obligations:
a/ The rights and obligations prescribed in
Article 58 of this Code;
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, they shall have the plaintiffs' rights and
obligations prescribed in Article 59 of this Code.
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 59 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 60 of this Code.
Article
62.-
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 State agencies,
people's armed force units, political organizations, socio-political
organizations, professional and socio-political organizations, social
organizations, socio-professional organizations or State enterprises, the
lawful representatives of the superior agencies of such agencies or
organizations or the lawful representatives of the agencies, organizations
which are assigned to take over the former's rights and obligations shall
participate in the procedures;
c/ Where the organizations are consolidated,
merged, divided, separated or organizationally transformed, the individuals or
organizations that take over the former's rights and obligations shall
participate in the procedures.
3. Where the involved parties are
organizations other than legal persons, whose representatives or managers die
while participating in the procedures, such organizations shall have to appoint
other persons as their representatives to participate in the procedures; if
such organizations 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
63.-
Defense counsels of involved parties' legitimate rights and interests
1. The defense counsels of involved parties'
legitimate rights and interests are persons asked by the involved parties and
accepted by courts to participate in the procedures to protect the involved
parties' legitimate rights and interests.
2. The following persons can be accepted by
courts to act as defense counsels of the involved parties' legitimate rights
and interests:
a) Lawyers who participate in the procedures
under the provisions of the legislation on lawyers;
b) Vietnamese citizens who have full civil
act capacity, have not been convicted or have been convicted but have their
criminal records remitted, who do not fall into the cases of being subject to
the application of administrative handling measure of sending to medical
treatment establishments, reformatories or to administrative probation; who are
not officers or employees in the court, procuracy or police sectors.
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
councels of the involved parties' legitimate rights and interests may jointly
defend the legitimate rights and interests of one involved party in a case.
Article
64.-
Rights and obligations of defense counsels of the involved parties' legitimate
rights and interests
1. To participate in the procedures right at
the time of lawsuit initiation or at any stage in the civil procedures. Defense
counsels of the involved parties’ legitimate rights and interests may
participate in cassation or reopening trial court sessions if the courts deem
it necessary.
2. To verify, collect and supply evidences to
courts, to study case files and to take notes, to copy necessary documents in
the case files in order to defend the legitimate rights and interests of the
involved parties.
3. To participate in conciliation, to
participate in court sessions or make their written defense of the legitimate
rights and interests of the involved parties.
4. To request on behalf of the involved
parties the replacement of procedure-conducting persons and/or other procedure
participants according to the provisions of this Code.
5. To assist the involved parties in legal
matters related to the defense of their legitimate rights and interests.
6. The right and obligations prescribed at
Points l, p and q, Clause 2, Article 58 of this Code.
Article
65.-
Witnesses
Persons who know details related to the
contents of cases may be summoned by courts to participate in the procedures in
the capacity as witnesses. Persons who lose their civil act capacity cannot act
as witnesses.
Article
66.-
Rights and obligations of witnesses
1. To supply all information, documents
and/or objects they have obtained, which are related to the resolution of
cases.
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 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 entitled to travel expenses and
other regimes as stipulated by law.
6. To request the courts which have summoned
them and competent State 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
procedure-conducting persons.
7. To compensate and bear responsibility
before law for damage caused to the involved parties or other persons by their
untruthful testimonies.
8. To be present at court sessions under the
court's summon if the witness's testimony must be given publicly at court
sessions; where witnesses fail to show up at court sessions without plausible
reasons and their absence obstruct the trial, the trial panels may issue
decisions to escort them to court sessions.
9. To make commitments before courts to
perform their rights and obligations, except for cases where the witnesses are
minors. Those witnesses who give false testimonies, supply untruthful
documents, refuse to give testimonies or are absent without plausible reasons
when summoned by courts shall bear responsibility as prescribed by law.
Article
67.-
Expert-witnesses
Expert-witnesses are persons who have
law-prescribed necessary knowledge and/or experiences in the fields where exist
objects needed to be expertised, who are selected under the agreement reached
between the involved parties or called by courts to expertise the objects in
question at the request of one or more involved parties.
Article
68.-
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 request 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
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
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;
e) To preserve the received documents and
return them to courts together with their expertising conclusions or with the
notices on impossibility to conduct expertise;
f) Not to arbitrarily collect documents 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 call
the expertise;
g) To enjoy travel expenses and other regimes
as stipulated by law;
h) To make commitments before courts to
perform their rights and obligations.
2. Those expert-witnesses who refuse to make
expertising conclusions without plausible reasons or who make untruthful
expertising conclusions or are absent without plausible reasons when summoned
by courts must bear responsibility therefor as prescribed by law;
3. 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 46 of this Code;
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 conducted the procedures in the
capacity as judge, people's juror, procurator or court clerk in the same case.
Article
69.-
Interpreters
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 under the agreement between the involved parties and are accepted or
requested by courts.
Article
70.-
Rights and obligations of interpreters
1. Interpreters shall have the following
rights and obligations:
a) To be present under courts' summons;
b) To interprete truthfully, objectively and
accurately;
c) To request procedure-conducting persons 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;
e) To enjoy travel expenses and other regimes
as stipulated by law;
f) To make commitments before courts to
perform their rights and obligations.
2. Those interpreters who deliberately
provide untruthful translations or are absent without plausible reasons when
summoned by courts must bear responsibility therefor as prescribed by law.
3. 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 46 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;
c) They have conducted the procedures in the
capacity as judge, people's juror, procurator or court clerk.
4. The provisions of this Article shall also
apply to sign-language interpreters for dumb or deaf persons.
Where only representatives or relatives of
the dumb or deaf persons understand their sign language, such representatives
or relatives may be accepted by courts to act as interpreters for such dumb or
deaf persons.
Article
71.-
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 at court sessions must be recorded in the minutes of the court
sessions.
Article
72.-
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 judges.
2. At court sessions, the replacement of
expert-witnesses and/or interpreters 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.
Where expert-witnesses or interpreters must
be replaced, the trial panels shall issue decisions to postpone the court
sessions. The request for other expert-witnesses or interpreters shall comply
with the provisions of Articles 67 and 69 of this Code.
Article
73.-
Representatives
1. The representatives in civil procedures
comprise the representatives at law and the proxy representatives.
2. The representatives at law as defined in
the Civil Code shall be the representatives at law in the civil procedures,
except where the representative right is restricted under law provisions.
Individuals, agencies, organizations that
initiate lawsuit to protect the legitimate rights and interests of others shall
also be the protected persons' representatives at law in the civil procedures.
3. The proxy representatives as defined in
the Civil Code shall be the proxy representatives in civil proceedings; for
divorce cases, the involved parties must not authorize others to represent them
in civil procedures.
Article
74.-
Rights and obligations of representatives
1. The representatives at law in civil
procedures shall exercise the procedural rights and obligations of the involved
parties they represent.
2. The proxy representatives in civil
procedures shall exercise the procedural rights and obligations in accordance
with the contents of the authorization documents.
Article
75.-
Cases of disallowance to act as representatives
1. Persons must not act as representatives at
law in the following cases:
a) If they are also the involved parties in
the same case with the represented persons and their legitimate rights and
interests are contrary to those of the represented persons;
b) If 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
76.-
Appointing representatives in civil procedures
While civil procedures are conducted, if any
involved party is the person who has restricted civil act capacity but has no
representative or his/her representative at law falls into one of the cases
specified in Clause 1, Article 75 of this Code, the court must appoint the
representative to participate in the proceedings at courts.
Article
77.-
Termination of the representation in civil procedures
The representatives at law, the proxy
representa-tives in civil procedures shall terminate their represen-tation
according to the provisions of the Civil Code.
Article
78.-
Consequences of the termination of representation in civil procedures
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
79.-
Obligations to prove
1. The involved parties requesting courts to
protect their legitimate rights and interests must introduce evidences to prove
that such requests are well-grounded and lawful.
2. The involved parties that protest against
other persons' claims against them must prove that such protests are
well-grounded and must provide evidence to prove.
3. Individuals, agencies or organizations
that initiate lawsuit to protect public interests, the State’s interests, or
request courts to protect others' legitimate rights and interests must
introduce evidences to prove that their lawsuits or requests are well-grounded
and lawful.
4. The involved parties that are obliged to
introduce evidences to prove but fail to introduce evidences or fail to
introduce adequate evidences shall have to bear the consequences of such
failure to prove or inadequate evidences.
Article
80.-
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 documents and have been duly notarized or authenticated.
2. If either involved party acknowledges or
does not protest against the details or facts given by the other involved
party, the latter must not prove them.
3. If an involved party has a representative
to participate in the procedures, that representative's acknowledgement is
regarded as the acknowledgement of such involved party.
Article
81.-
Evidences
Evidences in civil cases or matters are
factual things which are handed to courts by involved parties, individuals,
agencies or organizations or gathered by courts according to the order and
procedures prescribed by this Code and are used by Courts as bases to determine
whether the involved parties' claims or protests are well grounded and lawful
or not as well as to determine other details necessary for the proper resolution
of civil cases or matters.
Article
82.-
Sources of evidence
Evidences are gathered from the following
sources:
1. Readable, audible or visible materials;
2. Exhibits;
3. Involved parties' testimonies;
4. Witnesses' testimonies;
5. Expertising conclusions;
6. On-site appraisal minutes;
7. Practices;
8. Property evaluation results;
9. Other sources prescribed by law.
Article
83.-
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 certifying
the origins of those materials or documents related to such audio and/or video
recording.
3. Exhibits to be regarded as evidences must
be the original and related to the cases or matters.
4. 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 as provided for in Clause
2 of this Article, or are given orally at court sessions.
5. Expertising conclusions shall be regarded
as evidences if the expertise is conducted in accordance with the procedures
prescribed by law.
6. On-site appraisal minutes shall be
regarded as evidences if the appraisal is conducted in accordance with the
procedures prescribed by law and they are signed by the members who participate
in the appraisal.
7. Practices shall be regarded as evidences
if they are recognized by the local community where such practices exist.
8. Property valuation results shall be
regarded as evidences if the valuation is carried out in accordance with the
procedures prescribed by law or the documents provided by pricing experts
comply with the provisions in Clause 1 of this Article.
Article
84.-
Hand-over of evidences
1. During the process of resolving civil
cases or matters by courts, the involved parties shall have the rights and
obligations to hand over evidences to the courts; if they fail to hand over the
evidences or do not hand over all evidences, they must bear the consequences
thereof, except otherwise provided for by law.
2. The hand-over of evidences to courts by
involved parties must be recorded in the minutes of evidence hand-over and
receipt. The minutes must clearly state the appellations, forms, contents,
characteristics of the evidences; the number of copies, the number of pages and
time of reception; the signatures or finger prints of the deliverers, the
signatures of the recipients and seals of the courts. The minutes must be made
in two copies, one shall be incorporated in the case files and the other shall
be handed to the involved parties handing over the evidences.
3. The evidences submitted in ethnic minority
languages or foreign languages to courts by the involved parties must be
enclosed with their Vietnamese translations lawfully notarized or
authenticated.
Article
85.-
Collecting evidences
1. If it is deemed that the evidences
included in the files of civil cases or matters have not constituted sufficient
grounds for the resolution thereof, the judges shall request the involved
parties to deliver additional evidences.
2. Where the involved parties can not collect
the evidences by themselves and make requests therefor, the judges may apply
one or several of the following measures to collect the evidences:
a) Taking testimonies of the involved
parties, witnesses;
b) Calling expertises;
c) Deciding to valuate the properties;
d) Making on-site inspection, appraisal;
e) Authorizing the collection of evidences;
f) Requesting individuals, agencies or
organizations to supply readable, audible and/or visible materials, or other
exhibits related to the resolution of civil cases or matters.
3. When applying the measures specified at
Points b, c, d, e, and f, Clause 2 of this Article, the judges must issue
decisions clearly stating the reasons for the application and the request of
the courts.
The involved parties are entitled to complain
about courts' decisions to apply evidence-gathering measures of courts. Their
complaints must be addressed immediately to the procuracies. The procuracies
are entitled to request the courts to verify, gather evidences on the basis of
the involved parties' complaints, and consider the participation in court
sessions.
In case of necessity, the procuracies may
request the involved parties, individuals, agencies and/or organizations to
supply dossiers, documents and/or exhibits in order to ensure the exercise of
right to appeal, cassation or reopening procedures.
Article
86.-
Taking testimonies of involved parties
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 request 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 minutes 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 or district, township 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 57 of
this Code must be carried out in the presence of the lawful representatives of
such involved parties.
Article
87.-
Taking testimonies of witnesses
1. At the involved parties' requests or when
it is deemed necessary, judges may take testimonies of witnesses at court
offices or outside court offices.
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 86 of this Code.
3. The taking of testimonies of witnesses
aged not full 18 years, or of persons with restricted civil act capacity must
be carried out in the presence of their representatives at law or guardians.
Article
88.-
Confrontation
1. At the involved parties' requests or when
contradictions are deemed to have existed in the testimonies of the involved
parties or witnesses, judges may conduct confrontations among the involved
parties, between the involved parties and the witnesses or among the witnesses.
2. Confrontations must be recorded in minutes
which must be signed by the participants in such confrontations.
Article
89.-
On-site inspection, appraisal
1. On-site inspections, appraisals must be
carried out by judges in the presence of representatives of the commune-level
People's Committees, or agencies, organizations where exist objects which need
to be inspected, appraised, and the on-site inspections, appraisals must be
notified in advance so that the relevant involved parties know and witness such
inspections, appraisals.
2. On-site inspections, appraisals must be
recorded in minutes. The on-site inspection, (or) appraisal 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,
the representatives of the commune-level People's Committees 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
on-site inspections, appraisals minutes, the persons that conduct the
inspections, appraisals must request the representatives of the commune-level
People's Committees, agencies or organizations where exist the objects which
need to be inspected, appraised to sign and seal for certification.
Article
90.-
Requesting expertises
1. Upon the option agreement of the involved
parties, or at the request of one or more of the involved parties, judges may
issue decisions calling for expertises. The decisions requesting expertises
must clearly state the names and addresses of the expert-witnesses, the objects
of expertise, matters that need to be expertised and specific requirements
requiring the expert-witnesses' conclusions.
2. The expert-witnesses that receive
decisions requesting the expertises must carry out the expertises according to
law provisions.
3. Where they deem that the expertising
conclusions are inadequate, unclear or violate law, at the request of one or
more involved parties, the judges may issue decisions calling additional
expertises or re-expertises. The re-expertises may be conducted by the persons
that have conducted the preceding expertises or by other professional agencies
as provided for by law.
Article
91.-
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 to solicit expertises as provided for in
Article 90 of this Code.
2. Where the evidence forgery shows criminal
signs, the courts shall transfer them to the competent criminal investigation
bodies.
3. The suppliers of forged evidences must
compensate for damage if the forgery of evidences causes damage to others.
Article
92.-
Property valuation
1. The courts shall issue decisions to
valuate disputed properties in the following cases:
a) It is so requested by one or all of the
involved parties;
b) The parties agree on low prices for the
purposes of evading taxes or reducing payable court fees.
2. The Pricing Council set up under a court
decision is composed of its chairman and members being representatives of the
finance bodies and other relevant professional agencies. The Pricing Council
shall carry out the valuation only when all-their members are present. When
necessary, representatives of the commune-level People's Committees of the
localities where the properties subject to valuation is located shall be
invited to witness the valuation. The involved parties shall be notified in
advance of the time and venue of the evaluation and have the right to attend
and contribute comments on the evaluation. The right to decide on the prices of
the valuated properties shall rest on the Pricing Councils.
3. The finance agencies and other relevant
professional agencies shall be responsible for sending their officials to join
the Pricing Councils and create conditions for them to perform their tasks.
Persons appointed to be members of the Pricing Council must take part fully in
the valuation.
4. The valuation must be recorded in minutes,
stating clearly the opinions of each member, of the involved parties if they
attend. A decision of the Pricing Council must be voted for by more than half
of its members. The Pricing Council members, the involved parties, the
witnesses must sign the minutes.
Article
93.-
Entrusting the collection of evidences
1. In the course of resolving civil cases or
matters, a court may issue a decision to entrust another court or competent
agencies defined in Clause 4 of this Article to take the testimonies of
involved parties, and/or witnesses, to conduct on-site appraisals or property
valuations or other measures to gather evidences and to verify details of the
civil cases or matters.
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 thirty days after receiving the entrustment decision and 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. Where the gathering of evidences must be
conducted outside the Vietnamese territory, the courts shall carry out the
entrustment procedures through competent Vietnamese agencies or civil
procedure-conducting agencies of the foreign country(ies) that has (have)
signed judicial assistance agreement(s) with Vietnam or together with Vietnam
has (have) acceded to an international treaty on this matter.
Article
94.-
Requesting individuals, agencies and/or organizations to supply evidences
1. Where the involved parties that have
applied necessary measures to gather evidences still fail to gather by
themselves, they may request the courts to collect evidences in order to ensure
the proper resolution of civil cases and/or matters.
The involved parties that request the courts
to gather evidences shall make their written applications clearly stating the
point(s) to be proved, the evidence to be gathered, the reasons why they can
not 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.
2. The court may request directly or in
writing individuals, agencies or organizations that are managing a keeping the
evidences to supply them. The individuals, agencies or organizations that are
managing or keeping such evidences shall have the responsibility to supply the
evidences fully and in time as requested by the courts within fifteen days as
from the date of receiving the requests.
Article
95.-
Preserving evidences
1. If evidences have been handed over at
courts, the preservation of such evidences shall rest with the courts;
2. If evidences cannot be handed over at
courts, the preservation of such evidences shall rest with the evidence
keepers;
3. Where it is necessary to hand over
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 evidences.
Article
96.-
Assessing evidences
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 legality of every evidence.
Article
97.-
Disclosing and using evidences
1. Every evidence shall be publicly and
equally disclosed and used, except for cases specified in Clause 2 of this
Article.
2. Courts shall not publicize evidences
related to State secrets, fine customs and practices of the nation,
professional secrets, business secrets or secrets of individuals' private lives
at the legitimate requests of the involved parties.
3. Procedure-conducting persons and procedure
participants must keep secret, as provided for by law, evidences classified for
non-disclosure as prescribed in Clause 2 of this Article.
Article
98.-
Protecting evidences
1. Where evidences are being destroyed or are
in danger of being destroyed or is hard to be gathered in the future, the
involved parties may file their applications requesting the courts to decide on
the application of necessary measures to preserve evidence. 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 threatened, controlled
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 threatening, controlling or buying
off the witnesses to terminate their acts. Where the threatening controlling or
buying-off acts show criminal signs, the courts shall request procuracies to
examine the penal liability.
Chapter
VIII
PROVISIONAL EMERGENCY MEASURES
Article
99.-
Right to request the application of provisional emergency measures
1. During the resolution of civil cases, the
involved parties or their lawful representatives or agencies, organizations
instituting the cases to protect the legitimate rights and interests of other
persons defined in Clauses 1 and 2, Article 162 of this Code are entitled to
request the courts handling such cases to apply one or more provisional
emergency measures provided for in Article 102 of this Code to provisionally deal
with the urgent requests of the involved parties, to protect evidences
preserving their current conditions in order to avoid irrecoverable damage or
to ensure the judgment execution.
2. In urgent cases where it is necessary to
immediately protect evidences or to prevent possible serious consequences,
relevant individuals, agencies or organizations may file their applications to
request the competent courts to issue decisions to apply provisional emergency
measures prescribed in Article 102 of this Code simultaneously with the filing
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 119 of this Code.
Article
100.-
Competence to decide on the application, change or cancellation of provisional
emergency measures
1. The application, change, cancellation of
provisional emergency measures before the opening of a court session shall be
considered and decided by a judge.
2. The application, change, cancellation of
provisional emergency measures at court sessions shall be considered and
decided by the trial panels.
Article
101.-
Responsibilities for improper application of provisional emergency measures
1. The persons who request the courts to
apply provisional emergency measures must be responsible before law for their
requests. Where the requests for application of provisional emergency measures
are made improperly, thus causing damage to the persons against whom the
provisional emergency measures are applied or to the third persons,
compensation must be made.
2. If the courts apply the provisional
emergency measures improperly, thus causing damage to those subject to such
measures or 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 requested by individuals, agencies or
organizations;
c) The courts have applied the provisional
emergency measures beyond the requests of individuals, agencies or
organizations.
Article
102.-
Provisional emergency measures
1. Assigning minors to individuals or
organizations to look after, nurture, take care of and educate them;
2. Forcing the prior performance of part of
the alimony obligation;
3. Forcing the prior performance of part of
the obligation to compensate for damage to individuals whose lives and/or
health have been infringed upon;
4. Forcing the employers to advance wages,
remunerations or compensations, allowances for labor accidents or occupational
diseases incurred by employees;
5. Suspending the execution of decisions on
dismissing 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.
13. Other provisional emergency measures
provided for by law.
Article
103.-
Assigning minors to individuals or organizations to look after, nurture, take
care of, educate them
The assignment of minors to individuals or
organizations to look after, nurture, take care of, educate them shall apply if
the resolution of cases involves minors who have no guardians.
Article
104.-
Forced prior performance of part of the alimony obligation
The forced prior performance of part of the
alimony obligation shall apply if the resolution of cases is related to alimony
requests 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.
Article
105.-
Forced prior-performance of part of the obligation to pay compensation for
damage to health or life
Forced prior performance of part of the
obligation to pay compensation for damage to health or life shall apply if the
case resolution is related to requests for compensation for damage to health or
life and the requests are deemed well-grounded and necessary.
Article
106.-
Forcing employers to advance salary, remunerations, compensations or allowances
for labor accidents or occupational diseases incurred by employees
Forcing employers to advance salary,
remunerations, compensations or allowances for labor accidents or occupational
diseases incurred by employees shall apply if the case resolution is related to
requests for payment of salary, remunerations, compensations or allowances for
labor accidents or occupational diseases and the requests are deemed
well-grounded and necessary.
Article
107.-
Suspending the execution of decisions on dismissing employees
The suspension of execution of decisions on
dismissing employees shall apply if the case resolution is related to the
dismissal of employees and the decisions on dismissing employees are deemed
illegal or seriously affecting the life of the employees.
Article
108.-
Distraining disputed properties
1. The distraint of disputed properties shall
apply 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
109.-
Prohibiting the transfer of property right over disputed properties.
The prohibition of transfer of property right
over disputed properties shall apply if in the course of settling cases there
are grounds showing that the persons possessing or keeping the disputed
properties are committing acts of transferring the property right over the disputed
properties to other persons.
Article
110.-
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
111.-
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 apply 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
112.-
Freezing accounts at banks, other credit institutions, State Treasury
Freezing accounts at banks, other credit
institutions, State Treasury shall apply 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
113.-
Freezing assets at depositories
Freezing assets at depositories shall apply
if in the course of settling cases there are grounds showing that the obligors
have their assets deposited and the application of this measure is necessary to
ensure the settlement of the cases or to ensure the judgment enforcement.
Article
114.-
Freezing the obligors' properties
Freezing the obligors' properties shall apply
if in the course of settling cases there are grounds showing that the obligors
have such properties and the application of this measure is necessary to ensure
the settlement of the cases or to ensure the judgment enforcement.
Article
115.-
Prohibiting or forcing the performance of certain acts
Prohibiting or forcing the performance of
certain acts shall apply if in the course of settling cases there are grounds
showing that the non-performance or performance of certain acts by involved
parties or individuals, agencies and/or organizations has affected the case
resolution or the legitimate rights and interests of others that are involved
in the cases being resolved by courts.
Article
116.-
Application of other provisional emergency measures
Where it is provided for by law, the courts
may apply other provisional emergency measures than those prescribed in Clauses
1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11 and 12 of Article 102 of this Code.
Article
117.-
Procedures for application of provisional emergency measures
1. The persons who request courts to apply
provisional emergency measures must file their applications to competent
courts. Such an application must contain the following principal details:
a) Date of the application;
b) Name and address of the requester for the
application of provisional emergency measures;
c) Name and address of the person to be
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;
e) Reasons for the application of the
provisional emergency measures;
f) Provisional emergency measures to be
applied and specific requirements.
Depending on the requests for application of
provisional emergency measures, the requesters must provide the courts with
evidences to prove the necessity to apply such provisional emergency measures.
2. For cases of requesting the application of
the provisional emergency measures prescribed in Clause 1, Article 99 of this
Code, the judges assigned to settle the cases must consider and settle them.
Within three days after the receipt of the applications, if the requesters do
not have to apply security measures or immediately after such persons apply the
security measures prescribed in Article 120 of this Code, the judges must issue
decisions to apply the provisional emergency measures; if rejecting the
requests, the judges shall notify such in writing to the requesters, clearly
stating the reasons therefore.
Where the trial panels receive the written
requests for application of provisional emergency measures at court sessions,
the trial panels shall consider and issue decisions to apply the provisional
emergency measures immediately or after the requesters have completely applied
the security measures prescribed in Article 120 of this Code.
3. For case of requesting the application of
provisional emergency measures prescribed in Clause 2, Article 99 of this Code,
after receiving a written request together with the lawsuit petition and
accompanying evidences, the court's chief judge shall appoint one judge to
receive and settle the request. Within 48 hours after receiving the written
request, the judge must consider and issue a decision to apply provisional
emergency measures; if rejecting the request, the judge must notify such in
writing to the requester, clearly stating the reasons therefor.
4. Where the provisional emergency measures
provided for in Clauses 10 and 11 of Article 102 of this Code are applied, it
is only permitted to freeze the bank accounts or properties with value
equivalent to the property obligations to be performed by the persons subject
to the application of provisional emergency measures.
Article
118.-
Proposing the application of provisional emergency measures by agencies or
organizations which initiate lawsuits to protect others' rights and interests
Agencies, organizations initiating lawsuits
to protect others' rights and interests as prescribed in Clauses 1 and 2,
Article 162 of this Code shall propose in writing the courts to apply
provisional emergency measures, clearly stating the reasons therefor; the to
be-applied provisional emergency measures; names and addresses of persons with
legitimate rights and interests to be protected; names and addresses of persons
requested to be subject to provisional emergency measures; summarized contents
of disputes or acts of infringing upon the legitimate rights and interests of
involved parties; evidences to prove that their proposals are well-grounded and
lawful.
Article
119.-
The courts themselves issue decisions to apply provisional emergency measures
The courts shall themselves issue decisions
to apply the provisional emergency measures prescribed in Clauses 1, 2, 3, 4
and 5, Article 102 of this Code in cases where the involved parties do not
request the application thereof.
Article
120.-
Forcible application of security measures
1. The persons who request the courts to
apply one of the provisional emergency measures prescribed in Clauses 6, 7, 8,
10 and 11, Article 102 of this Code must 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 request the
application of the provisional emergency measures by requesters.
For cases prescribed in Clause 2, Article 99
of this Code, the time-limit for application of security measures provided for
in this Article must not exceed 48 hours after the filing of application.
2. Deposit sum, precious metals, precious
stones or valuable papers must be deposited into the frozen accounts at the
banks of the localities where the courts deciding to apply the provisional
emergency measures are headquartered within the time limits set by the courts.
Where the security measures are taken on
public holidays or weekends, the deposited money sums shall be kept at courts.
The courts must carry out the procedures for handover and reception thereof and
immediately deposit such money sums at banks on the following working day.
Article
121.-
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 117 in this Code.
Article
122.-
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 requested by the persons who have
requested 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 requesters.
c) Civil obligations of the obligor terminate
as provided for in the Civil Code.
2. In case of canceling the application of
provisional emergency measures, the courts must consider and permit the persons
who have requested the application of provisional emergency measures to receive
back the security money sums, precious metals, precious stones or valuable
papers prescribed in Article 120 of this Code, except for the cases specified
in Clause 1, Article 101 of this Code.
Article
123.-
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
requesters, the persons subject to the application thereof, and relevant
individuals, agencies and organizations, and competent civil judgment-executing
bodies and procuracies of the same level immediately after the issuance of such
decisions.
Article
124.-
Complaint, petitions about decisions on application, change or cancellation or
non-application, non-change, non-cancellation of provisional emergency measures
The involved parties shall have the right to
complain, and the procuracies shall have the right to petition to the chief
judges of competent 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 petition is three working days after the receipt of the decision
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.
Article
125.-
Setting complaints and petitions about decisions on application, change,
cancellation, or non-application, non-change, non-cancellation of the
provisional emergency measures
1. The chief judges of courts must consider
and settle complaints and petitions prescribed in Article 124 of this Code
within three working days after the receipt of the complaints or petitions.
2. The chief judges' decisions on settlement
of complaints, petitions shall be the final ones and must be issued or sent
immediately according to the provisions of Clause 2, Article 123 of this Code.
3. At court sessions, the settlement of
complaints or petitions falls within the jurisdiction of the trial panels. The
trial panels' decisions on settlement of complaints or petitions shall be the
final ones.
Article
126.-
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 provisions on civil judgment execution.
2. For the decisions on application of
provisional emergency measures involving properties with ownership
registration, the involved parties are obliged to submit copies of the
decisions to the agencies managing the ownership registration.
Chapter
IX
COURT FEES, CHARGES AND OTHER PROCEDURAL
EXPENSES
Section
1. COURT FEES AND CHARGES
Article
127.-
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. Charges shall include charges for
providing copies of judgments, decisions or other documents of courts, charges
for filing applications requesting courts to settle civil matters, charges for
settlement of civil matters and other charges stipulated by law.
Article
128.-
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.
3. If the persons who have advanced court
fees or charges must bear such fees and/or charges, immediately after the court
judgments or decisions take implement effect, the collected advance amounts
must be remitted into the State budget.
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 or matters is suspended, the already advanced court fees and/or advanced
charges shall be disposed when the resolution of the civil cases or matters
resumes.
Article
129.-
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 expenditure of court fee
advances, charge advances must comply with law provisions.
Article
130.-
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 cases 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 filed applications
requesting courts to settle civil matters must advance charges for the
resolution of such civil matters, except for cases where they do not have to
pay the charge advances.
Article
131.-
Obligation to pay first-instance court fees
1. The involved parties must bear the
first-instance court fees if their requests are not accepted by courts, except
for cases where they are exempted from, or do not have to pay such fees.
2. In cases where the involved parties cannot
themselves determine their portions in the common properties, and request the courts
to settle the division of the common properties, each party must pay the
first-instance court fee corresponding to the value of the property portion
she/he/it enjoys.
3. If prior to the opening of court sessions,
the courts conduct with conciliations and 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
requests 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 Clauses 1, 2, 3, 4 and
5 of this Article.
Article
132.-
Obligation to pay appellate court fees
1. The appellant must pay the appellate court
fees, if the appealed first-instance judgments or decision are maintained 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 pay first-instance court fees as provided for in Article 131 of this Code.
3. Where the courts of appeal abrogate the
appealed first-instance judgments or decisions for first-instance re-trial, the
appellants shall not be obliged to pay the appellate court fees. The obligation
to pay court fees shall be re-determined when the cases are retried.
Article
133.-
Obligation to pay charges
The obligation to pay charges shall be
determined depending on specific types of civil matters and shall be prescribed
by law.
Article
134.-
Specific provisions on court fees and charges
Court fees, court fee level applicable to
each specific type of case, types of charges and the specific charge levels,
the cases of exemption or non-payment of court fee or charge advances, the
cases of exemption or non-payment of court fees or charges, and other specific
matters concerning court fees and charges, which are not prescribed in this
Code, shall be stipulated by the National Assembly Standing Committee.
Section
2. OTHER PROCEDURAL EXPENSES
Article
135.-
Expertising expense advances, expertising expenses
1. Expertising expense advance is a sum of
money estimated by the organization or individual requested by the court to
conduct an expertise under a court decision.
2. Expertising expense means a reasonable and
necessary sum of money to be spent for the expertise and calculated by the
organization or individual conducting such expertise, on the basis of law
provisions.
Article
136.-
Obligation to pay expertising expense advances
1. The persons who request expertises must
pay expertising expense advances, except otherwise agreed upon by the parties
or provided for by law.
2. In cases where the involved parties agree
to choose the expertising agency, or jointly request expertise of the same
object, each party must pay half of the expertising expense advance, except
otherwise agreed upon by the parties or provided for by law.
Article
137.-
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.
2. In cases where the persons who have paid
the expertising expense advances are obliged to pay the expertising expenses,
but the paid advance money is not enough to cover the actual expertising
expenses, such persons must pay the deficit amount. If the advanced amounts
exceed the actual expertising expenses, the surplus shall be refunded to the
persons who have advanced the money.
Article
138.-
Obligation to pay expertising expenses
In cases where the parties do not otherwise
agree or the law does not otherwise prescribe, the obligation to pay
expertising expenses shall be determined as follows:
1. The persons who request expertises must
pay the expertising expenses if the expertising results prove that their
requests are groundless.
2. The persons who do not accept the
expertising requests must pay the expertising expenses if the expertising
results prove that the expertising requests are well grounded.
Article
139.-
Valuation expense advances, valuation expenses
1. The 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
140.-
Obligation to advance valuation expenses
1. The persons who request the valuations
must advance valuation expenses, except otherwise agreed upon by the parties or
provided for by law.
2. In cases where the involved parties could
not agree on the prices and request the courts to conduct the valuation, or for
cases prescribed at Point b, Clause 1, Article 92 of this Code, each party must
pay half of the valuation expenses.
Article
141.-
Handling of the paid valuation expense advance
1. In cases where the persons who have
advanced the valuation expenses do not have to pay the valuation expenses, the
persons who are obliged to pay the valuation expenses under court decisions
must refund the money to the persons who have advanced the valuation expenses.
2. In cases where the persons who have
advanced the valuation expenses are obliged to pay them, but 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
142.-
Obligation to pay valuation expenses
In cases where the involved parties do not
otherwise agree or the law does not otherwise prescribe, the obligation to pay
valuation expenses shall be determined as follows:
1. The persons who have requested the
valuation must pay the valuation expenses if the valuation results prove that
their requests are groundless.
2. The persons who do not accept the
valuation requests must pay valuation expenses if the valuation results prove
that the valuation requests are well-grounded.
3. In cases where the parties could not agree
on the prices and request the courts to conduct the valuation, each party must
pay half of the valuation expenses.
4. In cases where the courts issue decisions
on valuation as provided for at Point b, Clause 1, Article 92 of this Code:
a) Each involved party must pay half of the
valuation expenses if the valuation results prove that the courts' valuation
decisions are well grounded.
b) The courts shall pay the valuation
expenses if the valuation results prove that the courts' valuation decisions
are groundless.
5. In cases where the valuation is conducted for
the purpose of dividing a common property, each person who has received a share
from such property must bear the valuation expense amount proportionate to the
value of the property share he/she has received.
Article
143.-
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
144.-
Expenses for interpreters and lawyers
1. Expenses for interpreters mean sum of
money payable to interpreters in the course of settling civil cases or matters
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 lawyer's office 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.
4. Where the courts request interpreters, the
expenses for the interpreters shall be paid by the courts.
Article
145.-
Specific provisions on other procedural expenses
Specific expenses for expertises, valuation
and specific expenses for witnesses, interpreters, lawyers shall be stipulated
by the National Assembly Standing Committee.
Chapter
X
ISSUANCE, SENDING AND NOTIFICATION OF
PROCEDURAL DOCUMENTS
Article 146.- Obligation to issue, send or
notify procedural documents
The courts, the procuracies and the
judgment-executing agencies bodies have the obligation to issue, send or notify
procedural documents to the involved parties, other participants in procedures
and relevant individuals, agencies and/or organizations according to the
provisions of this Code.
Article
147.-
Procedural documents to be issued, sent or notified
1. Judgments and decisions of courts.
2. Lawsuits petitions, appeals, protest
decisions.
3. Written notices, summons, invitations in
civil procedures.
4. Receipts of collection of court fee or
charge advances, court fees, charges and other expenses.
5. Other procedural documents prescribed by
law.
Article
148.-
Persons effecting the issuance, sending or notification of procedural
documents.
1. The issuance, sending or notification of
procedural documents shall be carried out by the following persons:
a) Civil procedure-conducting persons or
people of the procedure document-promulgating agencies who are tasked to issue,
send or notify procedural documents;
b) 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;
c) The involved parties, their
representatives or the defense counsels of the involved parties' legitimate
rights and interests in the cases prescribed by this Code.
d) Postmen;
e) Other persons defined by law.
2. Persons who are obliged to effect the
issuance, sending or notification but fail to properly perform their
responsibilities, shall, depending on the nature and seriousness of their
violation, be disciplined, administratively handled or examined for penal
liability; if causing damage, they must compensate therefor according to law
provisions.
Article
149.-
Modes of issuing, sending or notifying procedural documents
The issuance, sending or notification of
procedural documents may be effected by the following modes:
1. Issuance, sending or notification is
effected directly or by post office or by the authorized third person;
2. Public posting;
3. Announcement on the mass media.
Article
150.-
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.
The persons who are obliged to execute the
procedural documents that have been issued, sent or notified must strictly
execute them; in case of failure to execute them or improper execution thereof,
they shall, depending the nature and seriousness of their violation, be
administratively sanctioned or examined for penal liability; if causing damage,
they must compensate therefor according to law provisions.
Article
151.-
Procedures for direct issuance, sending or notification
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.
Article
152.-
Procedures for direct issuance, sending or notification to individuals
1. If the persons to whom procedural
documents are issued, sent or notified are individuals, the procedural
documents must be delivered directly to them.
2. If they are absent, the procedural
documents may be handed to their relatives who have full civil act capacity and
live with them, then request such persons to pledge to personally hand the
documents to the former. The date when the co-residing relatives sign for the
receipt of the documents shall be considered the date of issuance, sending or
notification.
Where the former do not have any relatives
who have full civil act capacity and live with them or their relatives refuse
to receive the procedural documents on their behalf, such procedural documents
can be handed over to the population group leaders, village or hamlet chiefs
(hereinafter referred collectively to as population group leaders), People's
Committees or police offices of the communes, wards or district townships where
the persons to whom the procedural documents are issued, sent or notified
reside and request such persons to hand the documents in persons to them.
3. If the issuance, sending or notification
is effected through other persons, the issuers, senders or notifiers must make
a minutes clearly stating the absence of the persons to whom the documents are
sent or notified; the persons to whom the procedural documents are delivered;
reasons; the date and time of delivery; the relationship between the persons to
whom the procedural documents are issued, sent or notified and the persons to
whom the procedural documents are delivered, the latter's pledge to deliver the
documents in person to the former. The minutes must be signed by the persons
who undertake to deliver the procedural documents and the issuers, senders or
notifiers and the witnesses.
4. Where the persons to whom the procedural
documents are issued, sent or notified have moved to new places with a new
addresses, the documents must be issued, sent or notified to them according to
their new addresses.
5. Where the persons to whom the procedural
documents are issued, sent or notified are absent and the time of their return
or their addresses are not known, the issuers, senders or notifiers must make
record on failure to issue, send or notify, which shall be signed by the
persons who have supplied the information.
6. 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, commune/ward/district
township People's Committees or police offices of their refusal to receive the
procedural documents.
Article
153.-
Procedures for direct issuance, sending or notification to agencies, organizations
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 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.
Article
154.-
Procedures for public posting
1. The public posting of procedural documents
shall be effected only when the whereabouts of the persons to whom the
procedural documents are issued, sent or notified are not known or when the
direct issuance, sending or notification cannot be conducted.
2. The public posting of procedural documents
shall be conducted by courts directly or by the commune-level People's
Committees under courts' authorization, of the localities where the persons to
whom the procedural documents are issued, sent or notified reside or reside
last 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;
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;
c) Making records on the public-posting
procedures, clearly stating the date of posting.
3. The duration for public posting of
procedural documents shall be fifteen days as from the date of posting.
Article
155.-
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.
The announcement on the mass media can be
effected if so requested by the other involved parties. The fees for
announcement on the mass media shall be borne by the announcement requesters.
2. Announcement on the mass media shall be
published on central dailies for three consecutive issues, and broadcast on the
central radio or television station three times for three consecutive days.
Article
156.-
Notification of results of issuance, sending or notification of procedural
documents
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 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
157.-
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
individuals, agencies or organizations 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
158.-
Application of the Civil Code's provisions on time limits
The method of calculating the procedural time
limits, the provisions 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
159.-
The statute of limitations for lawsuits, the statute of limitations for
requests
1. The statute of limitations for lawsuits is
the time limit during which subjects have the right to initiate lawsuits to
request the courts to settle civil cases in order to protect their legitimate
rights and interests, which have been, infringed upon; if that time limit
expires, they will lose their right to initiate lawsuits unless otherwise
provided for by law.
2. The statute of limitations for requests is
the time limit during which subjects have the right to request the courts to
settle civil matters in order to protect the legitimate rights and interests of
individuals, agencies or organizations; the public interests and/or the State's
interests if that time limit expires, they shall lose the right to request,
unless otherwise provided for by law.
3. Where the law does not otherwise prescribe
the statute of limitations for lawsuits or for requests, those time limits are
stipulated as follows:
a) The statute of limitations for initiating
a lawsuit to request the court to settle a civil case is two years as from the
date the legitimate rights and interests of individuals, agencies or
organizations, public interests or the State's interests are infringed upon;
b) The statue of limitations for requesting
the court to settle a civil matter is one year as from the date the right to
request arises.
Article
160.-
Application of the Civil Code's provisions on statute of limitations
The Civil Code's provisions 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
161.-
Right to institute cases
Individuals, agencies and organizations are
entitled to institute cases by themselves or through their lawful
representatives (hereinafter referred collectively to as the litigators) at competent
courts to request the protection of their legitimate rights and interests.
Article
162.-
Right to institute civil cases to protect legitimate rights and interests of
other persons, public interests and/or the State's interests
1. The population, family and children
agencies and the Women's Union shall, within the scope of their tasks and
powers, have the right to institute marriage-and family-related cases if it is
so stipulated by the Law on Marriage and Family.
2. Superior Trade Unions of the grassroots
Trade Unions shall have the right to institute labor cases where it is
necessary to protect the legitimate rights and interests of the labor
collective as prescribed by law.
3. Agencies and organizations shall, within
the scope of their respective tasks and powers, have the right to institute
civil cases to request courts to protect the public interests and/or the
State’s interests in the domains under their respective charge.
Article
163.-
Scope of initiation of lawsuits
1. An individual, agency or organization may
initiate a lawsuit against another or many other individuals, agencies or
organizations regarding one legal relation or many interrelated legal relations
for settlement in the same case.
2. Many individuals, agencies or
organizations may jointly initiate a lawsuit against another individual, agency
or organization regarding one legal relation or many interrelated legal
relations for settlement in the same case.
3. Competent individuals, agencies or
organizations defined by this Code may initiate lawsuits against another
individual, agency or organization or many other individuals, agencies or
organizations regarding one legal relation or many interrelated legal relations
for settlement in the same case.
Article
164.-
Form and contents of a lawsuit petition
1. Individuals, agencies and organizations
initiating lawsuits must prepare their petitions.
2. A lawsuit petition must include the
following principal contents:
a) Date of its making;
b) Name of the court receiving the lawsuit
petition;
c) Name and address of the litigator;
d) Name and address of the person with
his/her rights and interests to be protected;
e) Name and address of the person who is
sued;
f) Name(s) and address(es) of persons(s) with
related rights and obligations, if any;
g) Specific matters requested to be settled
by the court against the defendant, the persons(s) with related rights and
obligations;
h) Names and addresses of witnesses, if any;
i) Documents and evidences to prove that the
lawsuit petition is well-grounded and lawful;
j) Other information which the litigator
deems necessary for the resolution of the case;
k) The lawsuit petition must be signed or
fingerprinted by the individual being the litigator; or signed or stamped by
the lawful representative of the agency or organization being the litigator.
Article
165.-
Documents and/or evidences accompanying lawsuit petitions
The litigators must send together with their
lawsuit petitions, documents and/or evidences to prove that their claims are
well-grounded and lawful.
Article
166.-
Submission of lawsuit petitions to courts
1. Persons who institute cases shall forward
their lawsuit petitions and the accompanying documents and/or evidences to
courts competent to settle their cases by the following modes:
a) Direct submission at courts;
b) Sending them to courts by post.
2. The date of initiating a lawsuit shall be
the date on which the lawsuit petition is filed at court or the postmarked date
of sending the petition.
Article
167.-
Procedures for receiving lawsuit petitions
Courts must receive lawsuit petitions lodged
by litigators directly or via post and must record them in the petition
registers. Within five working days as from the date of receiving the
petitions, the courts must consider them and issue one of the following
decisions:
1. To proceed with the procedures to accept
the cases if they fall within their jurisdiction;
2. To transfer the lawsuit petitions to
competent courts and notify the litigators thereof if the cases fall under
other courts' jurisdiction;
3. To return the lawsuit petitions to the
litigators if such matters do not fall under the court's jurisdiction.
Article
168.-
Returning lawsuit petitions
1. The courts shall return the lawsuit
petitions in the following cases:
a) The statute of limitations for lawsuit has
expired;
b) The petitioners have no right to initiate
a lawsuit or do not have full civil procedure act capacity;
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 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 courts due to the lack
of lawsuit conditions;
d) The notification time limit prescribed in
Clause 2, Article 171 of this Code has expired while litigators fail to come to
courts to carry out procedures for accepting the lawsuits, except for cases
where there are plausible reasons;
e) There are not sufficient conditions to
initiate lawsuits;
f) The cases do not fall under the courts'
jurisdiction.
2. When returning lawsuit petitions, courts
shall make written documents enclosed therewith, clearly stating the reasons
therefor.
Article
169.-
Request for amendment and/or supplementation of lawsuit petitions
1. In cases where a lawsuit petition does not
fully contain the details prescribed in Clause 2, Article 164 of this Code, the
court shall notify such to the litigator for amendment and/or supplementation
within a time limit set by the court, which, however, must not exceed thirty
days; for special cases, the court may extend that time limit but for not more
than fifteen days.
2. In cases where the litigators have amended
and/or supplemented their lawsuit petitions strictly according to the
provisions of Clause 2, Article 164 of this Code, the courts shall continue
processing the cases; if they fail to amend and/or supplement their lawsuit
petitions as requested by courts, the courts shall return the petitions as well
as documents and evidences to the litigators.
Article
170.-
Lodging and settling complaints about the return of lawsuit petitions
1. Within three working days as from the date
of receiving the lawsuit petitions and accompanying documents as well as
evidences, which are returned by courts, the litigators may file their
complaints to the chief judges of the courts which have returned the lawsuit
petitions.
2. Within three working days as from the date
of receiving the complaints about the return of lawsuit petitions, the courts'
chief judges must issue one of the following decisions:
a) To uphold the return of the lawsuit
petitions;
b) To receive back the lawsuit petitions and
accompanying documents as well as evidences in order to process the cases.
Article
171.-
Accepting cases
1. After receiving lawsuit petitions and
accompanying documents and/or evidences, if deeming that the cases fall within
their jurisdiction, the courts shall immediately notify the litigators thereof
in writing 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 courts 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 fifteen days as from the date of
receiving the courts' notices on payment of court fee advances, the litigators
must pay such advances.
3. The courts shall accept the cases after
the litigators submit to the courts the court fee advance payment receipts.
4. In cases where the litigators are exempt
from, or not required to pay, court fee advances or court fees, the courts must
accept the cases upon receiving the lawsuit petitions and accompanying
documents and/or evidences.
Article
172.-
Assigning judges to settle cases
1. Within three working days as from the date
a case is accepted, the court's chief judge shall assign a judge to resolve the
case.
2. In the course of settling the case, if the
assigned judge cannot continue with the assigned task, the chief judge of the
court shall assign another judge to continue that work; in cases where the
trial is being underway without the alternative judge, the case must be retried
from the beginning.
Article
173.-
Tasks and powers of judges when preparing case files
1. To notify the acceptance of the cases.
2. To request the involved parties to submit
documents and evidences to courts.
3. To apply of one or several measures to
collect evidences according to the provisions of Clause 2, Article 85 of this
Code.
Article
174.-
Notice on acceptance of cases
1. Within three working days as from the date
of receiving the cases, the courts must send written notices to defendants,
individuals, agencies, and organizations with rights and obligations related to
the settlement of the cases, to the procuracies of the same level on their
acceptances of the cases.
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 and address of the litigator;
d) Specific matters requested by the
litigator for resolution by the court;
e) List of documents and evidences submitted
together with the lawsuit petition by the litigator;
f) The time limit within which the notified
person must submit to the court his/her written opinions on the litigator's
claims and the accompanying documents and/or evidences, if any.
g) Legal consequences of the notified
person's failure to submit to the court his/her written opinions on the claims
in question.
Article
175.-
Rights and obligations of the notified persons
1. Within fifteen days as from the date of
receiving the notices, the notified persons must submit to courts their written
opinions on the litigators' claims and the accompanying documents and/or
evidences, if any.
In cases where an extension of the time limit
is needed, the notified persons must file their applications therefor to the
courts, clearly stating the reasons; if the extension applications are well
grounded, the courts must permit the extension, which, however, must not exceed
fifteen days.
2. The notified persons may request the courts
to let them read, take note or copy the lawsuit petitions and the accompanying
documents as well as evidences.
Article
176.-
Defendants' right to make counter-claims
1. Together with their obligation to submit
to courts their written opinions on the litigators' claims, the defendants are
entitled to file counter-claims against the plaintiffs.
2. The defendants' counter-claims against the
plaintiffs shall be accepted in one of the following cases:
a) The counter-claims are made to clear
liability against the plaintiffs' claims;
b) The counter-claims, if accepted, may
exclude the partial or full acceptance of the plaintiffs' claims;
c) There is an interrelation between the
counter-claim and the plaintiff's claim, and if these claims are settled in the
same case, the resolution of such case shall be more accurate and quicker.
Article
177.-
Right of persons with related rights and obligations to make independent claims
In cases where the persons with related
rights 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:
1. The resolution of the case is related to
their rights and obligations;
2. Their independent claims are related to
the case being settled;
3. If their independent claims are settled in
the same case, the resolution of such case shall be more accurate and quicker.
Article
178.-
Procedures for making counter-claims or independent claims
The procedures for making counter-claims or
independent claims shall comply with this Code’s provisions on procedures for
initiating lawsuits by plaintiffs.
Chapter
XIII
CONCILIATION AND TRIAL PREPARATION
Article
179.-
Time limit for trial preparation
1. The time limits for preparation for trial
of cases of various types are specified as follows:
a) For the cases prescribed in Articles 25
and 27 of this Code, the time limit shall be four months counting from the date
of acceptance of the cases;
b) For the cases prescribed in Articles 29
and 31 of this Code, the time limit shall be two months counting from the date
of acceptance of the cases.
For complicated cases, or when due to
objective obstacles, the courts' chief judges may decide to extend the trial
preparation time limits but for not more than two months for cases prescribed
at Point a and one month for cases prescribed at Point b, Clause 1 of this
Article.
2. Within the trial preparation time limits
prescribed in Clause 1 of this Article, the courts shall, on a case-by-case
basis, issue one of the following decisions:
a) To recognize the agreement between the
involved parties;
b) To suspend the resolution of the case;
c) To stop the resolution of the case;
d) To bring the case to trial.
3. Within one month as from the date of issuing
the decision to bring the case to trial, the court must open a trial session.
In case of plausible reasons, this time limit shall be two months.
Article
180.-
Principle for conducting conciliation
1. The courts must, during the period of
preparation for the first-instance trial of cases, carry out conciliations for
the involved parties to reach agreement on the resolution of the cases, except
cases which must not be conciliated or cannot be conciliated as stipulated in
Articles 181 and 182 of this Code.
2. The conciliation 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
181.-
Civil cases which must not be conciliated
1. Claims for compensation for damage caused
to State assets.
2. Civil cases arising from transactions
which are contrary to law or social ethics.
Article
182.-
Civil cases which cannot be conciliated
1. The defendants are intentionally absent
though having been duly summoned twice by courts.
2. The involved parties can not take part in
the conciliation for plausible reasons.
3. The involved parties being wives or
husbands in divorce cases, who have lost their civil act capacity.
Article
183.-
Notices on conciliation sessions
Before conducting conciliation sessions, the
courts must notify the involved parties or their lawful representatives of the
time and venue of the conciliation sessions as well as issues to be
conciliated.
Article
184.-
Participants in a conciliation session
1. The judge who presides over the
conciliation session.
2. The court clerk who records the minutes of
the conciliation session.
3. The involved parties or their lawful
representatives.
In a case with many involved parties, where
one of them is absent from the conciliation meeting, but the present parties
agree to proceed with the conciliation and such conciliation shall not affect
the rights and obligations of the absent party, the judge shall conduct the
conciliation among the present parties. If the involved parties request the
postponement of the conciliation meeting so that all involved parties can be
present, the judge must postpone the conciliation session.
1. The interpreter, if involved parties do
not know Vietnamese.
Article
185.-
Conciliation contents
When conducting conciliations, the judges
shall brief the involved parties on relevant law provisions on settlement of
the cases so that they relate them to their rights and obligations, and analyze
the legal consequences of successful conciliation so that they voluntarily
reach agreements on the resolution of the cases.
Article
186.-
Minutes of conciliation
1. The conciliations shall be recorded by
court clerks in minutes. The minutes of conciliation must contain the following
principal details:
a) Date on which the conciliation session is
held;
b) Venue of the conciliation session;
c) Participants in the conciliation session;
d) Opinions of the involved parties or their
lawful representatives;
e) Contents which have been or have not been
agreed upon by the involved parties.
2. A minutes of conciliation must be fully
affixed with signatures or fingerprints of the parties present at the
conciliation session, signature of the court clerk recording the minutes, and
signature of the judge presiding the conciliation session.
When the involved parties have reached mutual
agreements on issues to be settled in civil cases, the courts must make records
of the successful conciliation. Such records must be immediately sent to the
parties participating in the conciliation.
Article
187.-
Issuing decisions to recognize the agreements of the involved parties
1. Upon the expiry of the seven-day time
limit after making the records on successful conciliation, if no parties change
their opinions on such agreement, the judge who presides over the conciliation
session or another judge who has been assigned by the court's chief judge shall
issue a decision recognizing the agreement of the involved parties.
Within five working days after the issuance
of the decision to recognize the agreement of the involved parties, the court
must send the decision to the involved parties and the procuracy of the same
level.
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 3 of Article
184 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 conciliation session.
Article
188.-
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
neither appealed nor protested against according to the appellate procedures.
2. The decisions to recognize the involved
parties' agreements may be protested 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 or they contravene
law or social ethics.
Article
189.-
Suspension of the resolution of civil cases
1. The involved parties being individuals
have died or being organizations have been merged, divided, separated or
dissolved without any individuals, agencies or organizations inheriting their
procedural rights and obligations.
2. One involved party being an individual has
lost his/her civil act capacity while his/her representative at law has not
been determined yet.
3. The legal representative of the involved
party terminates without a replacement.
4. 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.
5. Other circumstances as prescribed by law.
Article
190.-
Consequences of the suspension of resolution of civil cases
1. The court must not delete the names of
suspended civil cases from the case acceptance books but only note down the
number and date of the decisions to suspend the resolution of such civil cases
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 cases.
3. Decisions to suspend the resolution of the
civil cases may be appealed or protested against under appellate procedures.
Article
191.-
Resuming the resolution of suspended civil cases
The courts shall resume the resolution of
suspended civil cases only when the suspension reasons no longer exist.
Article
192.-
Stopping the resolution of civil cases
1. After accepting cases which fall within
their respective jurisdiction, the courts shall issue decisions to stop the resolution
of the civil cases in the following circumstances:
a) The plaintiffs or defendants being
individuals have died while their rights and obligations are not inherited;
b) Agencies or organizations have been
dissolved or declared bankrupt without any individuals, agencies or
organizations inheriting their procedural rights and obligations;
c) The litigators withdraw their lawsuit
petitions with the courts' approval or the litigators have no right to initiate
lawsuits;
d) Agencies or organizations withdraw their
written lawsuits in cases where there are no plaintiffs or where the plaintiffs
request not to continue resolving the cases;
e) The involved parties have reached
agreements among themselves and do not request the courts to continue resolving
the case;
f) The plaintiffs are still absent although
they have been duly summoned twice;
g) 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;
h) Other circumstances prescribed by law.
2. The courts shall issue decisions to stop
the resolution of civil cases, delete names of such cases from the case
acceptance books and return the lawsuit petitions and accompanying documents as
well as evidences to the involved parties if the cases fall into one of the
circumstances under which the lawsuit petitions must be returned as provided
for in Article 168 of this Code.
Article
193.-
Consequences of the stoppage of resolution of civil cases
1. When the decisions to stop the resolution
of civil cases are issued, the involved parties shall not be entitled to
initiate lawsuits to request the courts to re-settle such civil cases 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 at Points c, e and f of Clause 1,
Article 192 of this Code and cases otherwise provided for by law.
2. In cases where the courts issue decisions
to stop resolving civil cases as provided for in Clause 1, Article 192 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 stop resolving civil cases as provided for in Clause 2, Article 192 of this
Code, the court fee advance money paid by the involved parties shall be
refunded to the payers.
4. The decisions to stop resolving civil
cases may be appealed or protested against under appellate procedures.
Article
194.-
Competence to issue decisions to suspend or stop the resolution of civil cases
1. The judges who are assigned to resolve
civil cases shall be competent to issue decisions to suspend or stop the
resolution of such civil cases.
2. Within five working days after the
issuance of decisions to suspend or stop the resolution of civil cases, the
courts must send such decisions to the involved parties and the procuracies of
the same level.
Article
195.-
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) Names and addresses of the plaintiff, the
defendant or other persons who initiate the lawsuit to request the court to
settle the case, persons with related rights and obligations;
e) Full names of the judge, people's jurors,
court clerk and full names of the alternate judge or people's jurors, if any;
f) Full name of the procurator who takes part
in the court session, if any;
g) Time, date and venue of the trial 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 after the issuance thereof.
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 to the procuracies of the same level. Within fifteen days
after receiving the dossiers, the procuracies must study then return the files
to the courts.
Chapter
XIV
FIRST-INSTANCE COURT SESSIONS
Section
1. GENERAL PROVISIONS ON FIRST-INSTANCE COURT SESSIONS
Article
196.-
General requirements for first-instance court sessions
The first-instance court sessions must be
conducted on the right times and at the right places inscribed in the decisions
to bring the cases to trial or in the notices on reopening the court sessions
in cases where the court sessions have been postponed.
Article
197.-
Direct, oral and continuous hearing
1. The courts must directly ascertain details
and facts of the cases by questioning and listening to the presentations of the
plaintiffs, the defendants, persons with related rights and obligations, lawful
representatives, defense counsels of the legitimate rights and interests of the
involved parties and other participants in the procedures; examine and verify
collected documents and evidences; listen to the opinions of the procuracies on
the resolution of the cases if the procurators participate in the court
sessions. Judgments shall only be rendered on the basis of the results of
arguments and inquiries at the court sessions as well as the evidences which
have been examined and verified at the court sessions.
2. The hearing shall be conducted orally and
continuously, excluding breaks. Members of the Trial Panels shall hear the
cases from the beginning to the end, except for the circumstances provided for
in Clause 1, Article 198 of this Code.
In special circumstances prescribed by this
Code, the hearing may be temporarily ceased for no more than five working days.
Upon the expiry of that cessation time limit, the trial shall resume.
Article
198.-
Replacement of Trial Panel members in special cases
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 if they are 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
199.-
Presence of plaintiffs at court sessions
1. The plaintiffs must be present at court
sessions under court subpoena; if they are absent for the first time for
plausible reasons, the court sessions must be postponed.
2. If a plaintiff has been duly summoned for
the second time but is still absent, he/she/it shall be regarded as having
waived his/her/its lawsuit and the court shall issue a decision to stop the
resolution of the case. In cases where the court issues a decision to stop the
resolution of the case, the plaintiff may initiate a lawsuit again provided
that the statute of limitations for such initiation of lawsuit has not yet
expired.
Article
200.-
Presence of defendants at court sessions
1. The defendants must be present at court
sessions under court subpoena; if they are absent for the first time for
plausible reasons, the court sessions must be postponed.
2. If a defendant has been duly summoned for
the second time but is still absent, the court shall continue to hear the case
in his/her absence.
Article
201.-
Presence of persons with related rights and obligations
1. Persons with related rights and
obligations must be present at court sessions under court subpoena; if they are
absent for the first time for plausible reasons, the court sessions must be
postponed.
2. If the persons with related rights and
obligations have been duly summoned for the second time but are still absent,
the courts shall continue to hear the cases in their absence.
3. If the persons with related rights and
obligations who make independent claims and have been duly summoned for the
second time but are still absent, they shall be regarded as having waived their
independent claims, and the courts shall issue decisions to stop the resolution
of the cases in respect of the independent claims of the persons with related
rights and obligations if the plaintiff and the defendant so agrees. In cases
where the courts issue decisions to stop resolving the cases in respect of the
independent claims, the persons with related rights and obligations shall be
entitled to initiate lawsuits again in respect of their independent claims
provided that the statute of limitations for such initiation of lawsuits has
not yet expired.
Article
202.-
Trial in absence of involved parties from court sessions
The courts shall proceed with the case
hearing in the following circumstances:
1. The plaintiff, the defendant or the
persons with related interests and obligations, who are absent from court
sessions, file their applications 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 Clause 2, Article
200 and Clause 2, Article 201 of this Code.
Article
203.-
Presence of defense counsels of legitimate rights and interests of the involved
parties
The defense counsels of legitimate rights and
interests of the involved parties must attend court sessions under court
subpoena. If they are absent for the first time for plausible reasons, the
court sessions must be postponed. If the persons defending legitimate rights
and interests of the involved parties are still absent after being summoned for
the second time, the courts shall proceed with the case hearing. In this case,
the involved parties shall themselves defend their legitimate rights and
interests.
Article
204.-
Presence of witnesses
1. Witnesses shall be obliged to attend court
sessions under court subpoena to clarify details of the cases. Where the
witnesses are absent but have earlier given their testimonies in person or sent
their testimonies to courts, the judges presiding over the court sessions shall
make public such testimonies.
2. Where witnesses are absent, the Trial
Panels may decide to postpone the court sessions or keep hearing the cases.
Where the witnesses are absent from the court sessions without plausible
reasons and their absence hinders the trial, they may be escorted to court
sessions under decisions of the Trial Panels.
Article
205.-
Presence of expert-witnesses
1. Expert-witnesses shall be obliged to
attend court sessions under court subpoena to clarify issues relating to the
expertise and expertising conclusions.
2. Where the expert-witnesses are absent, the
Trial Panels shall decide to postpone the court sessions or keep hearing the
cases.
Article
206.-
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,
except for cases where the involved parties keep requesting to continue the
trial.
Article
207.-
Presence of procurators
1. The procurators assigned by the heads of
the procuracies of the same level shall have the duty, to attend the court
sessions.
2. Where the procurators are replaced at
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 of the cases if they are present at the court session from
the beginning.
In cases where alternate procurators are not
available for replacement, the Trial Panels shall decide to postpone the court
sessions and promptly notify the heads of the procuracies of the same level
thereof.
Article
208.-
Time limit for postponing a court session and decision to postpone a court
session
1. In cases where the trial panel decides to
postpone the court session according to the provisions of Clause 2 of Article
51, Clause 2 of Article 72 and Articles 199, 200, 201, 203, 204, 205, 206, 207
and 215, and Clause 4 of Article 230, of this Code, the time limit for
postponement of a first-instance court session shall not exceed thirty days
after the issue of the decision to postpone the court session.
2. A decision to postpone a court session
must contain the following principal details:
a) Date of its issuance;
b) Name of the court and full names of
persons conducting the procedures;
c) The case to be brought to trial;
d) Reasons for the postponement of the court
session;
f) Time and venue for re-opening of the court
session.
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 to procedure participants.
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 re-open
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
209.-
Internal rules of court sessions
1. People aged under16 years shall not be
allowed to enter the court rooms, except where they are summoned by courts to
attend the court sessions.
All people present in the court room must
stand up as the Trial Panel enters the court room, respect the Trial Panel,
maintain order and strictly follow the instructions of the presiding judge of
the court session.
Only those persons who are permitted by the
trial panel can raise questions, reply or give statement. The persons who
question, reply or give statement must stand up, except where they are
permitted by the presiding judges of the court sessions to sit while making
questions, replies or statements for health reasons.
2. The Chairman of the Supreme People's Court
shall base him/herself on the provisions of Clause 1 of this Article to issue
the internal rules of court sessions.
Article
210.-
Procedures for rendering court judgments or decisions at court sessions
1. Judgments must be discussed and adopted by
the Trial Panels in the deliberation rooms.
2. Decisions to replace the
procedure-conducting persons, expert-witnesses, interpreters, to transfer the
cases, to suspend or stop the resolution of cases, or to postpone court
sessions must be discussed and adopted 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
211.-
Minutes of court sessions
1. Minutes of a court session must be fully
inscribed with the following details:
a) Main contents of the decision to bring the
case to trial as stipulated in Clause 1 of Article 195 of this Code;
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 audio-recording and/or video-recording of the developments of the
court session can be made only when it is consented by the Trial Panels.
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 clerk.
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 sign for certification.
Article
212.-
Preparing for the opening of a court session
Before the opening of a court session, the
court clerk must perform the following jobs:
1. Briefing on the internal rules of the
court session;
2. Examining and identifying 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;
3. Maintaining order in the court room;
4. Requesting all people present in the court
room to stand up when the Trial Panel enters the court room.
Section
2. PROCEDURES FOR COMMENCING A COURT SESSION
Article
213.-
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 clerk 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 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.
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-conducting persons, expert-witnesses, interpreters.
6. The presiding judge shall ask persons who
are entitled to request the replacement of procedure conductors,
expert-witnesses or interpreters to see if they wish to replace anyone.
Article
214.-
Handling requests for replacement of procedure conductors, expert-witnesses
and/or interpreters
In cases where certain persons request the
replacement of procedure conductors, 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
215.-
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 to see if there is
any one requesting the postponement of the court sessions or not. 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
216.-
Securing the objectivity of witnesses
1. Before witnesses are asked 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. In cases where 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.
Section
3. PROCEDURES FOR INQUIRIES AT COURT SESSIONS
Article
217.-
Inquiring the involved parties about change, supplementation or withdrawal of
their claims
The inquiring process shall start with the
presiding judge's inquiry of the involved parties about the following issues:
1. Inquiring the plaintiffs to see whether or
not they wish to change, supplement or withdraw part or whole of their lawsuit
petitions;
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 rights
and obligations who make independent claims to see whether or not they wish to
change, supplement or withdraw part or whole of their independent claims.
Article
218.-
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 lawsuits,
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 stop the trial regarding the withdrawn part or whole of the claim.
Article
219.-
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 rights and obligations still maintain their independent claims,
the persons with related rights and obligations shall become plaintiffs while
the persons who are obliged under the independent claims shall become
defendants.
Article
220.-
Recognizing the agreements of involved parties
1. The presiding judge shall ask whether the
involved parties can reach mutual agreement on the resolution of the cases or
not. In cases where they reach agreements on the resolution of the cases and
their agreements are voluntary, not contrary to law or social ethics, the trial
panels shall issue decisions to recognize their agreements on the resolution of
the cases.
2. The court decisions recognizing the involved
parties' agreements on the resolution of the cases shall take legal effect.
Article
221.-
Listening to the involved parties' presentations
1. In cases where certain involved parties
still maintain their claims and cannot reach agreements on the resolution of
the cases, the Trial Panels shall commence the hearing the cases by listening
to presentations of the involved parties 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.
In cases where agencies or organization
institute the cases, their representatives shall present the lawsuit claims and
evidences to prove that their lawsuit claims are well-grounded and lawful.
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 rights and obligations shall
be entitled to give additional opinions.
2. In cases where the plaintiff, the
defendant or the persons with related rights and obligations 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 to prove their respective claims and
proposals.
Article
222.-
Sequence of inquiry at court sessions
After listening to presentations by the
involved parties, the inquiry of each person about each matter shall be carried
out in the order that the presiding judge shall inquire first, then the
people's jurors; the defense counsels of legitimate rights and interests of the
involved parties; then the involved parties, and other procedure participants.
Where procurators participate in count sessions, their inquiries shall follow
the involved parties' inquiries.
Article
223.-
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 reply on their
behalf, then the plaintiffs may give additional answers.
Article
224.-
Inquiring defendants
1. In cases where there are 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.
Article
225.-
Inquiring persons with related rights and obligations
1. In cases where there are more than one
person with related rights and obligations, each of them shall be inquired
separately.
2. The persons with related rights and obligations
shall only be inquired about matters which have been unclearly presented by
themselves or by 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 proposals of the defendants or
the defense counsels of legitimate rights and interests of these persons.
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
226.-
Inquiring witnesses
1. In cases where there are more than one
witness, each of them shall be inquired separately.
2. 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.
3. The presiding judges shall request the
witnesses to present details of the cases which 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.
4. After completing their presentations, the
witnesses shall stay in the court rooms so that they may be further questioned.
5. 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 identities and must keep them from being
seen by attendants to the court sessions.
Article
227.-
Disclosing case documents
1. The Trial Panels shall make public case
documents in the following cases:
a) Procedure participants are absent from
court sessions but have given their testimonies during hearing preparation;
b) Testimonies given at court sessions by
procedure participants are contradictory to their previous testimonies;
c) In other cases where the Trial Panels deem
it necessary or where the procurators or procedure participants so request.
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 or private secrets at the requests
of the involved parties, the trial panels shall not disclose documents included
in the case files.
Article
228.-
Hearing audio-tapes and/or discs, watching video tapes and/or discs
At the request of the procurators or the
procedure participants or when deeming it necessary, the Trail Panels may
arrange for the audio tapes and/or discs to be heard, and/or video tapes and/or
discs to be screened at court sessions, except for the cases stipulated in
Clause 2 of Article 227 of this Code.
Article
229.-
Examining exhibits
Exhibits, photos or records certifying exhibits
may be presented for examination at court sessions.
When necessary, the Trial Panels may go
together with the involved parties for on-site examination of exhibits which
can not be brought to court sessions.
Article
230.-
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 at 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 publicize the
expertising conclusions.
4. If any procedure participants disagree
with the expertising conclusions publicized at 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.
Article
231.-
Concluding the inquiries at 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.
Section
4. ARGUMENT AT COURT SESSIONS
Article
232.-
Order for making arguments
1. At the end of the inquiring process, the
Trial Panels shall move on to the arguments at 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 plaintiffs
may make additional comments. 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;
b) Defense counsels of the defendants'
legitimate rights and interests shall make their presentations. The defendants
may make additional comments;
c) Defense counsels of the legitimate rights
and interests of persons with related rights and obligations shall make
presentations. Persons with related rights and obligations may make additional
comments.
2. In cases where the plaintiffs, the
defendants or persons with related rights and obligations have no one to defend
their legitimate rights and interests, they shall themselves make presentations
during the arguments.
Article
233.-
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 at court sessions as well as
results of the inquiring process at court sessions. They may respond to the
opinions of others. The presiding judges must not limit the argument time but
create conditions for persons participating in the arguments to fully express
their opinions, but may interrupt ideas irrelevant to the cases.
Article
234.-
Presentations of procurators
In cases where procurators attend court
sessions, after the procedure participants present their arguments and
responses, the presiding judges shall ask the procurators to express the
procuracies' views on the resolution of the cases.
Article
235.-
Resuming inquiries
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. Once the inquiries end, the arguments
must continue.
Section
5. DELIBERATION AND PRONOUNCEMENT OF JUDGMENTS
Article
236.-
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 can
participate in the deliberation. During the deliberation, the trial panel
members must resolve all matters of the cases by way of majority voting on
matter by matter. The people's jurors shall vote first while the judges shall
vote last. The minority may express their opinions in writing which shall be recorded
in the case files.
3. Deliberation must be based only on
documents and evidences which have been examined considered at court sessions,
results of inquiries at court sessions and the full consideration of opinions
of procedure participants and procurators.
4. 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.
5. 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 five
working days after the end of arguments at court sessions.
The trial panels must inform all persons
present at court sessions and the absent procedure participants of the hours,
date and place where the judgments shall be pronounced; if the trial pPanels
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 239 of this Code.
Article
237.-
Resumption of inquiries and arguments
Through deliberation, if deeming that details
of the cases have not been considered, the inquiries have yet been sufficient
or evidences should be further examined, the trial panels may decide to resume
the inquiries and arguments.
Article
238.-
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.
3. 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
clerk, the procurators, expert-witnesses and interpreter (if any); full names
and addresses of the plaintiff, defendant, persons with related rights and
obligations; agencies or organizations initiating the lawsuit; the lawful
representatives, the defense counsels of the legitimate rights and interests of
the involved parties; subject matter of the dispute; the serial number and date
of the decision to bring the case to public trial or closed trial; time and
place of trial.
4. The section of the judgment contents and
court assessment must state the lawsuit claims of the plaintiff; the lawsuit of
the agency or organization, the defendant's counter-claim; independent claims
of persons with related rights and obligations; assessment of the court;
points, clauses and articles of the legal documents which the court used as
grounds for the resolution of the case.
The court assessments must analyze grounds
for acceptance or non-acceptance of the claims, proposals of the involved
parties, the defense counsels of the legitimate rights and interests of the
involved parties.
5. The court ruling section must clearly
state the court decisions on each issue to be resolved in the case, on court
fees and right to appeal against the judgment; in cases where there are
decisions which must be executed immediately, such decisions must be clearly
stated.
Article
239.-
Pronouncing judgments
Upon pronouncement of a judgment, all people
in the court room 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, after reading the full text of the judgment, give
further explanation of the judgment execution and the right to appeal.
In cases where any involved parties do not
know Vietnamese, the interpreter must interprete the judgment in full into the
language they know.
Article
240.-
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. The amendment or supplementation
must be immediately notified to persons having rights and/or obligations
related thereto; and at the time to agencies, organizations initiating the
lawsuits and procuracies of the same level
2. The judgment amendment or supplementation
stipulated in Clause 1 of this Article must be made by judges in coordination
with the people's jurors being members of the trial panel. In cases where such
judges no longer hold the judge's position, the courts' chief judges shall make
such amendment or supplementation.
Article
241.-
Supplying judgment extracts and judgments
1. Within three working days after the end of
a court session, the involved parties, agencies or organizations initiating the
lawsuits shall be supplied with judgment extracts by the court.
2. Within ten days as from the date of
judgment pronouncement, the court shall hand over or send the judgment to the
involved parties, agencies or organizations initiating the lawsuit and the
procuracy of the same level.
Part
Three
PROCEDURES FOR RESOLUTION OF CASES AT APPEAL
COURTS
Chapter
XV
NATURE OF APPELLATE TRIAL AND THE APPEAL OR
PROTEST AGAINST JUDGMENTS, DECISIONS OF FIRST-INSTANCE COURTS
Article
242.-
Nature of appellate trial
Appellate trial means the re-trial by the
immediate superior court of a case with the first-instance court's judgment or
decision having not yet taken legal effect and being appealed or protested
against.
Article
243.-
Persons having the right to appeal
The involved parties or their
representatives, agencies or organizations initiating lawsuits shall have the
right to lodge their appeals against judgments or decisions of the
first-instance courts to suspend or stop the resolution of cases in order to
request the immediate superior courts to conduct re-trials according to the appellate
procedures.
Article
244.-
Application for an appeal
1. An application for an appeal must have the
following principal contents:
a) Date on which the application is made;
b) Full name and address 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.
d) The reason(s) for appealing and the
appellant's claims.
e) Signature or fingerprint of the appellant.
2. 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 appeal
court, the appeal court must transfer the application to the first-instance
court for carrying out necessary procedures and sending the case file to the
appeal court as provided for in Article 255 of this Code.
3. The appeal application must be accompanied
with additional documents and/or evidences, if any, to prove that their appeals
are well grounded and lawful.
Article
245.-
Time limit for an appeal
1. The time limit for an appeal against the
first-instance court's judgment is fifteen days as from the date of judgment
pronouncement; for the involved parties being absent from the court sessions,
the time limit for an appeal shall be counted from the date the judgment is
handed to them or publicly posted up.
2. The time limit for an appeal against the
first-instance court's decision on suspending or stopping the resolution of the
case is seven days counting from the date the person who has the right to
appeal receives such decision.
3. In cases where the appeal application is
sent by post, the appeal date shall be calculated on the basis of the sending
postmark date printed on the envelope.
Article
246.-
Examination of appeal applications
1. After receiving the appeal applications,
the first-instance courts must examine their validity as provided for in Clause
1, Article 244 of this Code.
2. In case of overdue appeals, the
first-instance courts shall request the appellants to further explain the
reasons therefor and produce documents and/or evidences, if any, to prove that
the reasons for late submission of their appeal applications are plausible.
Where the appeal applications are made not in
compliance with the provisions of Clause 1, Article 244 of this Code, the
first-instance courts shall request the appellants to amend or supplement them.
Article
247.-
Overdue appeals
1. Appeals that are not made within the time
limit stipulated in Article 245 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, documents and/or evidences, if any, to the appeal
courts.
2. Within ten days after receiving the
overdue appeals and the accompanying documents and/or evidences, the courts of
appeal shall set up a Panel consisting of three judges to consider the overdue
appeals. The Panel may issue decisions to accept or not to accept the overdue
appeals and clearly state the reasons therefor in such decisions. The appeal
courts must send their decisions to the late appellants and the first-instance
courts. If the appeal courts accept the overdue appeals, the first-instance
courts shall carry out procedures stipulated in this Code and forward the case
files to the appeal courts.
Article
248.-
Notification of payment of appeal court fee advance
1. After accepting the valid appeal
applications the first-instance courts must notify the appellants thereof so
that they pay the appeal court fee advances as required by law, if they do not
fall cases of being exempt from, or having not to pay, the appeal court fee
advances or appeal court fees.
2. Within ten days as from the date of
receiving the courts' notifications of payment of the appeal court fee
advances, the appellants must pay the court fee advances and submit to the
first-instance courts the receipts of the payment of court fee advances. If
past this time limit the appellants fail to pay the appeal fee court advances,
they shall be deemed to have given up their appeals, unless they have plausible
reasons therefor.
Article
249.-
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.
2. Persons 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
250.-
Protest by procuracies
The head of the procuracy of the same level
or the immediate superior level shall be entitled to protest against the
first-instance court's judgments or decisions to suspend or stop the resolution
of the cases in order to request the immediate superior court to directly
settle the cases according to the appellate procedures.
Article
251.-
Protest decisions of procuracies
1. The procuracies' protest decisions must be
made in writing and contain the following principal contents:
a) Issuing date and serial number of the
protest decision;
b) Name of the procuracy that issues the
protest decision;
c) Protested sections of the first-instance
court's judgments or decisions which have not yet taken legal effect.
d) Reason(s) for such protest and the
procuracy's claims.
e) Full name of the person signing the
protest decision and seal of the procuracy issuing the protest decision.
2. The protest decisions must be immediately
sent to the first-instance courts that have rendered the protested judgments or
decisions so that such courts shall carry out procedures stipulated by this
Code and send the case files to the appeal courts as provided for in Article
255 of this Code
3. Enclosed with the protest decisions shall
be additional documents and/or evidences to prove that the procuracies'
protests are well grounded and lawful.
Article
252.-
Time limit for a protest
1. The time limit for making a protest
against the first-instance court's judgment shall be fifteen days for the
procuracy of the same level and thirty days for the immediate superior
procuracy, counting from the date of judgment pronouncement. In cases where the
procurators do not attend the court sessions, the protest time limit shall be
counted from the date the procuracy of the same level receives the judgment.
2. The time limit for making a protest
against the first-instance court's decision on suspending or stopping the
resolution of the case shall be seven days for the procuracy of the same level
and ten days for the immediate superior procuracy, counting from the date the
procuracy of the same level receives such decision.
Article
253.-
Notification of protests
1. The procuracy issuing a protest decision
must promptly send the protest decision to the parties relating to the protest.
2. Persons who are notified of the protest
shall be entitled to send to the appellate court documents expressing their
views on the protested matters. Such documents shall be included in the case
files.
Article
254.-
Effects of an appeal or a protest
1. The appealed or protested parts of the
first-instance judgment or decision 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 or protested against, shall
take legal effect as from the date of expiry of the appeal or protest time
limit.
Article
255.-
Forwarding case files, appeals, protests
The first-instance courts must forward to the
appeal courts case files, appeals and/or protests and the accompanying
documents, evidences within five working days from the date:
1. The appeal or protest time limit expires
if the appellant must not pay the appeal court fee advance;
2. The appellant submits to the first-instance
court the receipt of appeal court fee advance payment.
Article
256.-
Modifying, supplementing, withdrawing appeals, protests
1. Before the opening of appeal court
sessions or at appeal court sessions, the appellants may modify or supplement their
appeals and the procuracies issuing protest decisions may modify or supplement
their protests provided that the modification or supplementation must not go
beyond the scope of the original appeals or protests, if the appeal or protest
time limit has expired.
2. Before the opening of appeal court
sessions or at appeal court sessions, the appellants may withdraw their appeals
and the procuracies issuing protest decisions or the immediate superior
procuracy may withdraw their protests.
The appeal courts shall stop the appellate
trial of parts of the cases against which the appellants have withdrawn their
appeals or the procuracies have withdrawn their protests.
3. The modification, supplementation or
withdrawal of appeals or protests before the opening of appeal court sessions
must be made in writing and sent to the appellate courts. The appeal courts
must promptly notify the involved parties of such modification or withdrawal.
The modification, supplementation or
withdrawal of appeals or protests at court sessions must be recorded in the
minutes of the court sessions.
Chapter
XVI
PREPARATION FOR AN APPELLATE TRIAL
Article
257.-
Accepting cases for appellate trial
1. Immediately after receiving case files,
appeals, protests and accompanying documents, evidences, the appeal courts
shall record them in acceptance books.
2. The chief judge of the appeal court or the
chief judge of the appeal court of the Supreme People's Court shall set up the
Appellate Trial Panel and assign a judge to act as the presiding judge.
Article
258.-
Time limit for appellate trial preparation
1. Within 2 months as from the date of
receiving a case, the appeal court shall, depending on each specific case,
issue one of the following decisions:
a) To suspend the appellate trial of the case;
b) To stop the appellate trial of the case;
c) To bring the case to appellate trial.
For complicated cases or due to objective
obstacles, the chief judge of the appeal court may decide to prolong the trial
preparation time limit but for not more than one month.
2. Within one month as from the date of
issuance of the decision to bring the case to trial, the court must open an
appeal court session; in case of plausible reasons, this time limit shall be
two months.
3. Decisions to bring the case to appellate
trial must be forwarded to the procuracies of the same level and persons
relevant to the appeal or the protest.
Article
259.-
Suspension of the appellate trial of cases
The appeal courts shall issue decisions to
suspend the appellate trial of cases; the consequences of suspension of the
appellate trial of cases and the resumption of appellate trial of cases shall
comply with the provisions of Articles 189, 190 and 191 of this Code.
Article
260.-
Stoppage of the appellate trail of cases
1. The appeal courts shall issue decisions to
stop the appellate trial of cases in the following cases:
a) Cases prescribed at Points a and b of
Clause 1 of Article 192 of this Code;
b) The appellants withdraw the entire appeals
or the procuracies withdraw the entire protests;
c) Other cases prescribed by law.
2. Where the appeal courts issue decisions to
stop the appellate trials of cases under the provisions of Point b, Clause 1 of
this Article, the first-instance judgments or decisions shall take legal effect
as from the date the appeal courts issue such decisions.
Article
261.-
Decisions to apply, change or cancel the provisional emergency measures
During the appellate trials, preparation time
limit, the appeal courts may decide to apply, change or cancel provisional emergency
measures prescribed in Chapter VIII of this Code.
Article
262.-
Forwarding the case files to the procuracies for study
1. After accepting cases for appellate trial,
the appeal courts must transfer the case files to the procuracies of the same
level for study.
2. The time limit for the procuracies of the
same level to study the case files shall be fifteen days as from the date of
receiving the case files; upon the expiry of such time limit, the procuracies
must return the case files to the courts.
Chapter
XVII
APPELLATE TRIAL PROCEDURES
Article
263.-
Scope of appellate trial
The appeal courts shall only review the parts
of the first-instance judgments or decisions, which are appealed or protested
against or related to the review of the appealed or protested contents.
Article
264.-
Participants in appeal court sessions
1. The appellants, the involved parties,
individuals, agencies and/or organizations that are related to the resolution
of the appeals or protests and the defense counsels of the involved parties'
legitimate rights and interests must be summoned to the appeal court sessions.
The courts can summon other procedure participants to court sessions if they
deem it necessary for the resolution of the appeals or protests.
2. Procurators of the procuracies of the same
level must participate in the appeal court sessions in cases where the
procuracies lodge the protests or have participated in the first-instance court
sessions.
Article
265.-
Suspension or stoppage of appellate trials at court sessions
At appeal court sessions, the suspension or
stoppage of the appellate trail of cases shall comply with the provisions of
Articles 259 and 260 of this Code.
Article
266.-
Postponement of appeal court sessions
1. In cases where procurators of the
procuracies of the same level, who must participate court sessions, are absent,
the appeal court sessions must be postponed.
2. If the appellants are absent for the first
time for plausible reasons, the court sessions must be postponed. 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 of the cases, appealed by the absent appellants.
3. If procedure participants other than the
appellants are absent from court sessions, the postponement or continuation of
the appeal court sessions shall comply with the provisions of Articles 199,
200, 201, 202, 203, 204, 205 and 206 of this Code.
4. The duration for postponement of, and the
decisions to postpone, the appeal court sessions shall comply with the
provisions of Article 208 of this Code.
Article 267.- Preparation for the opening of
appeal court sessions and procedures for starting the appeal court sessions
The preparation for the opening of appeal
court sessions and the procedures for starting the appeal court sessions shall
comply with the provisions of Articles 212, 213, 214, 215 and 216 of this Code.
Article
268.-
Inquiries at court sessions
1. After the conclusion of the procedures for
opening an appeal 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 or protested contents.
2. The presiding judge shall ask the
following:
a) Whether or not the plaintiff wishes to
withdraw his/her/its lawsuit petition.
b) Whether or not the appellant or the
procurator wishes to change, supplement or withdraw their appeal or protest;
c) Whether or not the involved parties can
reach mutual agreements on the resolution of the case.
Article
269.-
Plaintiffs withdraw lawsuit petitions before the opening of, or at, appeal
court sessions
1. If the plaintiffs withdraw their lawsuit
petitions before the opening of, or at, appellate court sessions, the 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 stop 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 stop the resolution of the cases, the plaintiffs shall be
entitled to re-institute the cases according to the procedures prescribed by
this Code, if the statute of limitations for such case re-institution has not
yet expired.
Article
270.-
Recognizing the agreement of the involved parties at appeal court sessions
1. At appeal 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.
Article
271.-
Hearing presentations of the involved parties at appeal court sessions
1. In cases where the involved parties still
uphold their appeals or the procuracies maintain their protests while the
involved parties cannot reach mutual agreement on the resolution of the cases,
the appellate trial panels shall start the case trial by listening to the
presentations of the involved parties in the following order:
a) The defense counsels of the appellants'
legitimate rights and interests shall present the appealed contents and the
grounds therefor. 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 rights and obligations and the persons with related rights
and obligations.
In cases where only procuracies protest, the
procurators shall present the protested contents and the grounds therefor; in
cases where there are both appeal and protest, the involved parties shall
present the appealed contents and the grounds therefore first, then the
procurators shall present the protested contents and the grounds therefor;
b) The defense counsels of legitimate rights
and interests of other parties related to the appeal or the protest shall
present their opinions on the appealed and protested contents. The involved
parties may give additional opinions.
2. In cases where the involved parties have
no defense counsels, they shall themselves present their opinions on the
appealed or protested contents as well as their proposals.
3. At the appeal court sessions, the involved
parties and procurators may produce additional evidences.
Article
272.-
Procedures for inquiries and publicization of documents, examination of exhibits
at appeal court sessions
1. Procedures for inquiring participants and
publicizing documents, examining exhibits at appeal court sessions shall be the
same as those applicable at first-instance court sessions.
2. The inquiry shall be made on matters falling
within the scope of appellate trials as stipulated in Article 263 of this Code.
Article
273.-
Arguments at appeal court sessions
Arguments at appeal court sessions shall be
conducted in a way similar to those at the first-instance court sessions, and
the order of presentation shall comply with the provisions of Article 271 of
this Code and the arguments shall be conducted only on matters falling within
the scope of appellate trials and having been already asked at the appeal court
sessions.
Article
274.-
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
procedures.
Article
275.-
Jurisdiction of the appellate trial panels
The appellate trial panels shall have the
following rights:
1. To uphold the first-instance judgments;
2. To revise the first-instance judgments;
3. To repeal the first-instance judgments and
transfer the case files to the first-instance courts for retrial of the cases;
4. To abrogate the first-instance judgments
and stop the resolution of the cases.
Article
276.-
Amendment of 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 proof and collection of evidences have
been carried out sufficiently and in accordance with the provisions of Chapter
VII of this Code.
2. The proof and collection of evidences have
not yet been carried out sufficiently at the first-instance level but have been
fully supplemented at appellate court sessions.
Article
277.-
Annulment of first-instance judgments and transfer of case files to the
first-instance courts for retrial of cases
The appellate trial panels shall annul the
first-instance judgments and transfer the case files to the first-instance
courts for retrial of the cases in the following circumstances:
1. The proof and collection of evidences 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 at
the appeal 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.
Article
278.-
Annulment of first-instance judgments and stoppage of case resolution
The appellate trial panels shall annul
first-instance judgments and stop the case hearings if during the resolution of
the cases at the first-instance court sessions, the cases fell under one of the
circumstances stipulated in Article 192 of this Code.
Article
279.-
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, protest,
assessment;
c) The court ruling.
3. The introduction section must clearly
state the name of the appeal 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 clerk,
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; names of appellants
or protesting procuracy; public or closed trial, time and place of trial.
4. The section on the case contents, the
appeal or the protest and assessment must summarize the contents of the case
and decision of the first-instance court; content of the appeal or protest;
assessment of the appellate trial panel; specific points, clauses and articles
of the legal normative documents on which the appellate trial panel base to
settle the case.
The assessment of the appellate trial panel
must analyze grounds for accepting or not accepting the appeal or the protest.
5. The court ruling section must clearly
state the appellate trial panel's decisions on matters which had to be settled
in the case due to the appearance of appeal or protest, and on the payment of
the first-instance court fees and/or appellate court fees.
6. The appellate judgments shall take effect
as from the date they are pronounced.
Article
280.-
Procedures for appellate revision of decisions of the first-instance courts
which are appealed or protested against
1. When reviewing first-instance courts'
decisions, which are appealed or protested 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. Procurators of the procuracies of the same
level shall participate in the appellate meetings to review the first-instance
courts' judgments which are appealed or protested against.
3. One member of the appellate trial panel
shall present the summarized contents of the first-instance judgments which are
appealed or protested against, the contents of the appeals or the protests and
accompanying documents as well as evidences, if any.
4. The procurators state the procuracies'
opinions on the resolution of the appeals or protests before the appellate
trial panels make decisions.
5. When reviewing the first-instance courts'
decisions, which are appealed or protested 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) Abrogate the first-instance courts'
decisions and transfer the case files to the first-instance courts for
continued resolution of the cases.
6. The appellate decisions shall take effect
as from the date they are issued.
Article
281.-
Forwarding appellate judgments, decisions
Within fifteen days as from the date 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 level, the competent civil
judgment-executing bodies, the appellants, persons whose rights and obligations
are related to the appeals or the protests or their lawful representatives.
In cases where the appeal court of the
Supreme People's Court conducts the appellate trials, this time limit may be
longer but shall not exceed twenty five days.
Part
Four
PROCEDURES FOR REVIEWING LEGALLY EFFECTIVE
JUDGMENTS, DECISIONS
Chapter
XVIII
CASSATION PROCEDURES
Article
282.-
Nature of cassation
Cassation means the review of courts' legally
effective judgments or decisions, which are protested against as serious law
violations in the settlement of cases are detected.
Article
283.-
Grounds for protest according to cassation procedures
Legally effective judgments or decisions of
courts shall be protested against according to cassation procedures when there
is one of the following grounds:
1. Conclusions in the judgments or decisions
are incompatible with the objective details of the cases;
2. Serious violations are committed in legal
proceedings;
3. Serious errors are made in the application
of laws.
Article
284.-
Discovering legally effective judgments or decisions which need to be reviewed
according to cassation procedures
1. The involved parties, individuals,
agencies or other organizations are entitled to discover law violations in
legally effective judgments or decisions of courts and notify such in writing
to the persons entitled to protest as defined in Article 285 of this Code.
2. Where law violations are discovered in
legally effective judgments or decisions of courts, the procuracies and/or the
courts must notify such in writing to the persons entitled to protest, defined
in Article 285 of this Code.
Article
285.-
Persons who are entitled to protest according to cassation procedures
1. The chief judge of the Supreme People's
Court and the Chairman of the Supreme People's Procuracy shall be entitled to
protest according to cassation procedures against the legally effective
judgments or decisions of the courts of all levels, except for cassation
decisions of the Council of Judges of the Supreme People's Court.
2. The chief judges of the provincial-level
People's Courts and the chairmen of the provincial-level People's Procuracies
shall be entitled to protest according to the cassation procedures against
legally effective judgments or decisions of district-level People's Courts.
Article
286.-
Postponement and suspension of enforcement of legally effective judgments or
decisions.
1. Persons who are competent to protest
against legally effective judgments or decisions of courts may request the
postponement of enforcement of judgments or decisions in order to consider the
protests according to cassation procedures. The postponement of enforcement of
judgments shall comply with law provisions on civil judgment execution.
2. Persons who have protested 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
287.-
Decisions to protest according to cassation procedures
A decision to protest according to cassation
procedures shall consist of the following principal contents:
1. Number and date of the protest decision;
2. Position of the person who makes the
protest decision;
3. Number and date of the legally effective
judgment or decision being protested against;
4. Rulings of the legally effective judgment
or decision being protested against;
5. Comments, analysis of the violations or
errors of the legally effective judgment or decision being protested against;
6. Legal grounds for making the protest
decision;
7. Decision to protest against parts or whole
of the legally effective judgment or decision;
8. Name of the court that is competent to
conduct cassation review of such case;
9. Proposals of the protestant.
Article
288.-
Time limit for protest according to cassation procedures
Persons who are entitled to protest according
to cassation procedures may only make their protests within three years as from
the date the court judgments or decisions take legal effect.
Article
289.-
Modification, supplementation, withdrawal of protest decisions according to
cassation procedures
1. Persons who have protested according to
cassation procedures shall be entitled to modify or supplement the protest
decisions if the protest time limit prescribed in Article 288 of this Code has
not yet expired.
2. Persons who have protested shall be
entitled to withdraw parts or whole of the protest decisions before the opening
of court sessions or at cassation review court sessions.
Article
290.-
Forwarding decisions to protest according to cassation procedures
1. Decisions to protest according to
cassation procedures must be immediately sent to the courts that have issued
the legally effective judgments or decisions being protested against, the
involved parties, the competent civil judgment-executing agencies and persons
whose rights and obligations are related to the protested contents.
2. In cases where the Chief Judge of the
Supreme People's Court or the chief judges of the provincial-level People's
Courts protest, the protest decisions and the case files must be immediately
sent to the people's procuracies of the same level. The procuracies shall study
the files within 15 days as from the date of receiving the case files; 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 Chairman of the Supreme
People's Procuracy or the heads of the provincial-level people's procuracies
protest, the protest decisions must be immediately sent to the courts competent
to hear the cases according to cassation procedures.
Article
291.-
Jurisdiction to review cases according to cassation procedures
1. The Committee of Judges of the
provincial-level people's courts shall review according to cassation procedures
legally effective judgments and decisions of the district-level people's
courts, which are protested against.
2. The Civil Court, the Economic Court, the
Labor Court of the Supreme People's Court shall review according to cassation
procedures legally effective judgments or decisions of the provincial-level
people's courts, which are protested against.
3. The Council of Judges of the Supreme
People's Court shall review according to cassation procedures legally effective
judgments and decisions of appellate courts, the Civil Court, the Economic
Court and the Labor Court of the Supreme People's Court, which are protested
against.
4. When legally effective judgments, or
decisions on the same civil case which fall under the jurisdiction of the
courts of different levels as stipulated in Clauses 1 and 2 of this Article are
protested against, the competent superior court shall review the whole case
according to cassation procedures.
Article
292.-
Participants in cassation review court sessions
1. The cassation review court sessions must
be participated by the Procuracies of the same level.
2. When deeming it necessary, the courts
shall summon proceedings participants and other persons related to the protest
to participate in cassation review court sessions.
Article
293.-
Time limit for opening of cassation review court sessions
Within four months as from the date of
receiving the protests and case files, the courts competent to cassation review
must open court sessions to review cases according to cassation procedures.
Article
294.-
Preparations for cassation review court session
The court chief judges shall assign a judge
to prepare written explanation of the case at the court session. The written
explanations summarize the case contents and the judgments, decisions of the
courts of different levels as well as the protested contents. The explanation
must be forwarded to members of the Cassation Review Councils at least seven
days before the opening of the cassation review court sessions.
Article
295.-
Proceedings at cassation review court sessions
1. After the presiding judge opens a court
session, a member of the Cassation Review Panel shall present the brief
contents of the case; the case handling process; rulings of the legally
effective court judgments or decisions being protested; grounds for the protest
and proposals of the protestant. The representative of the procuracy shall
express the opinions of the procuracy on the protest decision.
2. In cases where proceedings participants or
other persons are summoned by the courts to participate in the cassation review
court sessions, these persons shall be allowed to present their opinions on the
protest decision. The representative of the procuracy expresses the opinion of the
procuracy on the protest decision.
3. Members of the Cassation Review Panel
shall discuss and express their opinions on the resolution of the case. The
representative of the procuracy presents the opinions of the procuracy on the
resolution of the case.
4. The Cassation Review Panel shall vote on
the resolution of the case.
The cassation review decisions of the
Committees of Judges of the provincial-level people's courts or the Judges'
Council of the Supreme People's Court must be voted for by more than half of
the total number of their members.
The Judges' Committee of the provincial-level
people's courts or the Judges' Council of the Supreme People's Court shall vote
in the order of for and against the protest and other opinions; if the
decisions are not voted for by more than half of the total number of members of
the Judges' Committee of a provincial-level people's court or the Judges'
Council of the Supreme People's Court, the court session must be postponed.
Within 30 days as from the date of issuing the decision to postpone the court
session, the Judges' Committee or the Judges' Council must re-try the case with
the participation of all members.
Article
296.-
Scope of the cassation review
1. The Cassation Review Panels shall only
review parts of legally effective judgments or decisions being protested
against or related to the review of the protested contents.
2. The Cassation Review Panels shall be
entitled to review parts of the legally effective judgments or decisions which
are neither protested against nor related to the review of the protested
contents, if these parts infringe upon the interests of the State, or the
interests of the third parties other than the involved parties in the cases.
Article
297.-
Jurisdiction of the Cassation Review Panels
The Cassation Review Panels shall have the
following rights:
1. To reject the protests and uphold the
legally effective judgments or decisions;
2. To uphold the lawful judgments or
decisions of the subordinate courts, which have been annulled or amended;
3. To annul legally effective judgments or
decisions for re-trials according to the first-instance or appellate
procedures;
4. To annul judgments or decisions of the
courts which have tried the cases and stop the resolution thereof.
Article
298.-
Upholding the subordinate courts' lawful judgments or decisions which have been
annulled or amended
The Cassation Review Panels shall issue
decisions to annul legally effective judgments or decisions being protested and
uphold the judgments or decisions rendered legally by subordinate courts but
partially or entirely annulled or amended by legally effective judgment or
decisions being protested.
Article
299.-
Annulment of the legally effective judgments or decisions, which are protested
against, for first-instance re-trial or appellate re-trial.
The Cassation Review Panels shall issue
decisions to annul legally effective judgments or decisions being protested
against for re-trials according to the first-instance or appellate procedures
in the following cases:
1. The proof and collection of evidences have
been carried out insufficiently or in contravention of the provisions of
Chapter VII of this Code;
2. The conclusions 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 fails to comply with the provisions of this Code or other
serious procedural violations have been committed.
Article
300.-
Annulment of legally effective judgments and/or decisions and stopage of case
resolution
The Cassation Review Panels shall issue
decisions to annul legally effective judgments and/or decisions and stop the
case resolution if the cases fall under one of the circumstances stipulated in
Article 192 of this Code.
Article
301.-
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 provincial people's courts 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 hearing shall be specified;
c) Full names of the court clerk and the
procurator participating in the court session;
d) Name of the case that has been brought to
cassation review trial by the Panel;
e) Full names and addresses of the involved
parties in the case;
f) Summary of the contents of the case,
rulings of the legally effective judgment or decision being protested against;
g) Decision to protest; grounds for making
the protest;
h) Assessment of the Cassation Review Panel
analyzing the grounds for accepting or not accepting the protest;
i) Points, clauses or articles of the Civil
Procedure Code, on which the Cassation Review Panel bases to make decision;
j) Decision of the Cassation Review Panel.
Article
302.-
Effect of the cassation review decisions
The cassation review decisions shall take
legal effect as from the date the Cassation Review Panels issue them.
Article
303.-
Forwarding the cassation review decisions
Within five working days as from the date of
issuance of decisions, the Cassation Review Panels must forward the cassation
decisions to:
1. The involved parties and other persons
with related interests and obligations under the cassation review decisions;
2. The courts which have rendered legally
effective judgments or decisions being protested against;
3. The procuracy of the same level, the
competent civil judgment-executing agencies.
Chapter
XIX
REOPENING PROCEDURES
Article
304.-
Nature of reopening procedures
Reopening means the review of legally
effective judgments or decisions which are protested against due to the
appearance of newly detected details which may substantially change the
contents of the judgments or decisions and which were not known to the courts
and the involved parties when the courts rendered such judgments or decisions.
Article
305.-
Grounds for protest according to reopening procedures
Legally effective judgments or decisions
shall be protested 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 decisions of courts or decisions of
State agencies on which the courts based themselves to resolve the cases had
already been annulled.
Article
306.-
Notice and verification of newly discovered details
1. The involved parties, individuals,
agencies or organizations shall be entitled to discover new details of cases
and notify them in writing to the persons entitled to protest, defined in
Article 307 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 protest, defined in Article 307 of this Code.
Article
307.-
Persons entitled to protest according to reopening procedures
1. The Chief Judge of the Supreme People's
Court and the Chairman of the Supreme People's Procuracy shall have the power
to protest according to reopening procedures against legally effective
judgments or decisions of courts of all levels, except for the decisions of the
Council of Judges of the Supreme People's Court.
2. Chief Judges of the provincial-level
people's courts and heads of the provincial-level people's procuracies shall
have the power to protest against legally effective judgments or decisions of
the district-level people's courts.
3. Persons who have protested against legally
effective judgments or decisions shall have the power to suspend the
enforcement of such judgments or decisions until the reopening decisions are
made.
Article
308.-
Time limit for protest according to reopening procedures
The time limit for protest according to
reopening procedures shall be one year counting from the date the persons
having the power to protest acquire grounds for protest according to reopening
procedures prescribed in Article 305 of this Code;
Article
309.-
Jurisdiction of the Reopening Procedure Panels
The Reopening Procedure Panels shall have the
following rights:
1. To reject protests and uphold legally
effective judgments or decisions;
2. To annul legally effective judgments or
decisions for first-instance retrial according to the procedures prescribed by
this Code;
3. To annul legally effective judgments or
decisions and stop the resolution of the cases.
Article
310.-
Application of the provisions on reopening procedures
Other provisions on reopening procedures
shall comply with the provisions on the cassation procedures prescribed in this
Code.
Part
Five
PROCEDURES FOR RESOLUTION OF CIVIL MATTERS
Chapter
XX
GENERAL PROVISIONS ON PROCEDURES FOR
RESOLUTION OF CIVIL MATTERS
Article
311.-
Scope of application
The courts shall apply the provisions of this
Chapter and other provisions of this Code, which are not contrary to the
provisions of this Chapter, to resolve civil matters prescribed in Clauses 1,
2, 3, 4 and 6 of Article 26 and Clauses 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 and 7 of Article 28,
Clauses 1 and 4 of Article 30, Clause 3 of Article 32 of this Code.
Civil matters mean a situation where
individuals or organizations 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 individuals, agencies or organizations, or
request courts to recognize their civil, marriage and family, business, commercial
or labor rights.
Article
312.-
Petitions for the court resolution of civil matters
1. Persons requesting courts to resolve civil
matters must file their petitions with competent courts defined in Section 2 of
Chapter III of this Code.
2. A petition shall contain the following
principal contents:
a) Date of making the petition;
b) Name of the court that is competent to
handle the petition;
c) Full name and address of the petitioner;
d) Specific issues requested to be resolved
by the court; reasons, purposes and bases of the request for a court resolution
of such civil matters;
e) Full names and addresses of persons who
are related to the resolution of the petition, if any.
f) Other information that are deemed by the
petitioner to be relevant to the resolution of his/her petition;
g) Signature or fingerprint of petitioner
being individual or signature and seal of the lawful representative of the
agency or organization being the petitioner.
3. The petition must be accompanied by
documents, evidences to prove that the petitions are well-grounded and lawful.
Article
313.-
Participants in meetings to resolve civil matters
1. The courts must hold open meetings to
resolve civil matters.
After issuing decision to hold meetings for
resolution of civil matters, the courts must immediately send such decisions
and the dossiers on the civil matters to the procuracies of the same level for
study. The procuracies must study them within seven days after the receipt of
the dossiers; past this time limit, the procuracies must return the dossiers to
the courts for holding meetings to resolve the civil matters.
2. Procurators of the procuracies of the same
level must attend the meetings. In cases where they are absent the meetings
must be postponed.
3. Petitioners or their lawful
representatives must participate in the meetings under the courts' subpoena.
If petitioners are absent for the first time
for plausible reasons, the courts shall postpone the meetings. Where
petitioners request the courts to resolve the civil matters in their absence,
the courts may do so. If petitioners have been duly summoned twice but still
absent, they shall be deemed to waive their petitions and the courts shall
issue decisions to stop the resolution of the civil matters. In cases where the
courts issue decisions to stop the resolution of the civil matters, the
petitioner's right to request the courts to resolve the civil matters according
to the procedures prescribed by this Code shall still be guaranteed.
4. Related persons or their lawful representatives
may be summoned to the meetings by courts. In case of necessity, the courts may
summon witnesses, expert-witnesses 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
314.-
Procedures for conducting meetings to resolve civil matters
1. A meeting to resolve civil matters shall
be conducted in the following order:
a) The court 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;
c) 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;
e) Witnesses present their opinions; or
expert-witnesses present their conclusions and explain issues which remain
unclear or contradictory;
f) Evidences shall be examined;
g) Procurator shall present the procuracy's
views on the resolution of the civil matters;
h) The judge shall consider and decide to
accept or not to accept the request for resolution of the civil matters;
2. In case where a person is absent, the
judge may publicize the testimonies, documents and/or evidences supplied or
disclosed to the court by that person.
Article
315.-
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, court
clerk;
d) Full name and address of the petitioner
for the resolution of civil matters;
e) Specific matters requested to be resolved
by the court;
f) Names and addresses of the related
persons;
g) Assessment of the court and grounds for
accepting or not accepting the petition;
h) Legal bases for resolution of civil
matters;
i) Court's rulings;
j) Court fees to be paid.
2. Decisions to resolve civil matters must be
forwarded to the procuracies of the same level, competent judgment-executing
agencies, the petitioners for the resolution of civil matters and individuals,
agencies and/or organizations whose rights and obligations are related to such
decisions within five working days as from the date of issuance of such
decisions.
Article
316.-
Appeal and protest against civil matter-resolving decisions
Petitioners and individuals, agencies and/or
organizations whose rights and obligations are related to civil
matter-resolving decisions shall be entitled to appeal, the procuracies of the
same level and immediate superior procuracy shall be entitled to protest
against civil matter-resolving decisions in order to request the immediate
superior court to re-settle them according to the appellate procedures, except
those decisions prescribed in Clauses 2 and 3, Article 28 of this Code.
Article
317.-
Appeal or protest time limits
1. The petitioners and individuals, agencies
and/or organizations whose rights and obligations are related to civil
matter-resolving decisions shall be entitled to appeal against such decisions
within seven days as from the date the courts issue such decisions, except for
cases prescribed in Clause 1 of Article 358 and Clause 1 of Article 372 of this
Code. In cases where they are not present at court sessions, such time limit
shall be counted from the date they receive the civil matter-resolving
decisions or the date such decisions are announced or posted up.
2. The procuracies at the same level shall be
entitled to protest against civil matter-resolving decisions within 7 days, the
immediate superior procuracies shall be entitled to protest within 15 days as
from the date the courts make such decisions, except for cases prescribed in
Clause 2, Article 358 and in Clause 2, Article 372 of this Code.
Article
318.-
Procedures for appellate trial of civil matter-resolving decisions which are
appealed or protested against
The procedures for appellate review of civil
matter-resolving decisions being appealed or protested against shall comply
with the provisions of Article 280 of this Code.
Chapter
XXI
PROCEDURES FOR RESOLUTION OF PETITIONS TO
DECLARE PERSONS LOSING THEIR CIVIL ACT CAPACITY OR HAVING RESTRICTED CIVIL ACT
CAPACITY
Article
319.-
The petitions to declare persons losing their civil act capacity or having
restricted civil act capacity
1. Persons with related rights and
obligations, relevant agencies or organizations shall be entitled to request
courts to declare persons losing their civil capacity or having restricted
civil act capacity according to the provisions of the Civil Code.
2. The petitions for courts to declare
persons losing their civil act capacity or having restricted civil act capacity
must fully contain the details prescribed in Clause 2, Article 312 of this
Code.
3. The petitions for courts to declare
persons losing their civil act capacity must be accompanied by the conclusions
of professional bodies and other evidences to prove that such persons suffer
mental or other diseases that render them unable to perceive or control their acts.
4. The petitions for courts to declare
persons having restricted civil act capacity must be accompanied by evidences
to prove that such persons are drug addictive or addicted to other stimulants,
thus leading to a damage or loss of the assets of their families.
Article
320.-
Preparation for petition consideration
1. The time limit for preparing the
consideration of a petition for the court to declare a person losing his/her
civil act capacity or having restricted civil act capacity shall not exceed
thirty days as from the date the court accepts the petition. Upon the expiry of
such time limit, the court shall issue a decision to hold a meeting to consider
the petition.
2. During the time limit of preparing the
petition consideration, at the proposals of the involved parties, the courts
may request the examination of the health or ailments of the persons who are
requested to be declared losing their civil act capacity or having restricted
civil act capacity. In this case, the courts shall issue decisions to open
meetings to consider the petitions after the examination conclusions are made.
3. During the preparation for consideration
of a petition, if the petitioner withdraws his/her petition, the court shall
issue a decision to stop the petition consideration.
4. Within fifteen days as from the date the
decision to open a meeting is issued, the judge must hold such meeting to
consider the petition.
Article
321.-
Decisions to declare persons losing their civil act capacity or having
restricted civil act capacity
1. The courts may accept or reject petitions
to declare persons losing their civil act capacity or having restricted civil
act capacity.
2. In cases where a petition is accepted by
the court, the court shall issue a decision to declare a person losing his/her
civil act capacity or having restricted civil act capacity.
In its decision to declare a person having
restricted civil act capacity, the court must decide on the at-law
representative of the person having a restricted civil act capacity and the scope
of representation.
Article
322.-
Petitions for annulling decisions to declare persons losing their civil act
capacity or having restricted civil act capacity
1. When a person who is declared by the court
to have lost his/her civil act capacity or have had a restricted civil act
capacity is no longer in the declared state, that person or persons with
related rights and obligations or relevant agencies or organizations may
request the court to issue a decision to annul the decision that has declared such
person losing his/her civil act capacity or having restricted civil act
capacity.
2. A petition for the court to annul the
decision that declares a person losing his/her civil act capacity or having
restricted civil act capacity must include all the contents prescribed in
Clause 2 of Article 312 of this Code.
Article
323.-
Preparing for petition consideration and decisions of courts
1. The time limit for preparing to consider a
petition requesting the court to annul a decision that has declared a person losing
his/her civil act capacity or having restricted civil act capacity shall comply
with the provisions of Article 320 of this Code.
2. The court may accept or reject petitions
for annulling decisions that have declared persons losing their civil act capacity
or having restricted civil act capacity.
3. In case of accepting the petitions the
courts shall issue decisions to annul the decisions that have declared persons
losing their civil act capacity or having restricted civil act capacity.
Chapter
XXII
PROCEDURES FOR RESOLUTION OF PETITIONS TO
ISSUE NOTICES ON SEARCH OF PERSONS ABSENT FROM THEIR RESIDENCE PLACES
Article
324.-
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 six
consecutive months or more, and at the same time request courts to apply
measures for management of the assets of the absent persons under the
provisions of the Civil Code.
2. A petition for the court to announce the
search of a person absent from his/her residence place must contain all
contents prescribed in Clause 2 of Article 312 of this Code.
3. The petitions to request courts to issue
notices on search of persons absent from their residence places must be
accompanied by evidences to prove that such persons have been absent for six
consecutive months or more. In case of petitions for the courts to take measures
to manage the assets of the absent persons, the petitioners must provide
documents on the situation of assets of the absent persons, the management of
the existing assets as well as the list of the absent persons’ relatives.
Article
325.-
Preparing to consider petitions
1. The time limit for preparing to consider a
petition for the court to issue a notice on search of a person absent from
his/her residence place shall be 20 days as from the date the court receives
the petition. Upon the expiry of such time limit, the court shall issue a
decision to open a meeting to consider the petition.
2. Within the above-mentioned time limit, the
courts may issue decisions to stop the petition consideration if the
petitioners withdraw their petitions or the persons on search notice return and
request the courts to stop considering the petitions.
3. Within 10 working days as from the date of
issuance of the decision to open a meeting, the judge must open a meeting to
consider the petition.
Article
326.-
Decisions to issue notices on search of persons absent from their residence
places
1. The courts may accept or not accept
petitions for issuance of notices on search of persons absent from their
residence places.
2. In case of accepting a petition the court
shall issue a decision to accept the petition and 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 assets 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 assets of such person according to the provisions of the
Civil Code.
Article
327.-
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:
1. Date of issuance of the notice;
2. Name of the court that issues the notice;
3. Serial number and date of the court’s
decision to accept the petition for issuance of 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 relevant individuals or
organizations for contacts by the person to be searched for or other persons
having information on the person to be searched for.
Article
328.-
Announcement of notices on search of persons absent from their residence places
1. A notice on search of a person absent from
his/her residence place must be published on a central daily for three
consecutive issues and broadcast on the national Radio or TV station for three
times in three 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
329.-
Effect of decisions on issuance of notices on search of persons absent from
their residence places
Decisions on issuance of notices on search of
persons absent from their residence places prescribed in Article 326 of this
Code shall automatically cease to be effective in cases where the persons to be
searched for return.
Chapter
XXIII
PROCEDURES FOR RESOLUTION OF PETITIONS FOR
DECLARING PERSONS MISSING
Article
330.-
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. A petition for the court to declare a
person missing must fully contain the details prescribed in Clause 2 of Article
312 of this Code.
3. The petitions must be accompanied by
evidences to prove that the persons who are requested to be declared missing
have been absent for two consecutive years or more without authenticated
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
331.-
Preparing for petition consideration
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 327 and
328 of this Code. The time limit for such a search notice shall be four months
as from the date of publishing or broadcasting the notice 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 stop the
consideration of the petition for declaring that person missing.
Article
332.-
Decision to declare a person missing
1. Within fifteen days as from the expiry of
the time limit for announcing a search notice, the court shall open a meeting
to consider a petition for declaring a person missing.
2. The court may accept or not accept
petitions.
3. 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 assets of the person who is declared
missing and the request is accepted, the court’s decision must also indicate
specific measures to be taken to manage assets of that person according to the
provisions of the Civil Code.
Article
333.-
Petitions for annulling court decisions declaring persons missing
1. In cases where a person who is declared
missing 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 a decision annulling the decision that has
declared such person missing.
2. A petition for the court to annul a
decision declaring a person missing must fully contain the details prescribed
in Clause 2 of Article 312 of this Code.
3. Such a petition must be accompanied by
evidences to prove that the person who is declared missing has returned or is
still alive.
Article
334.-
Decision to annul a decision that declares a person missing
1. Within 15 days as from the date of
accepting a petition for annulling a decision that has declared a person
missing, the court shall open a meting to consider the petition.
2. The courts may accept or not accept
petitions.
3. 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
XXIV
PROCEDURES FOR RESOLUTION OF PETITIONS FOR
DECLARING PERSONS DEAD
Article
335.-
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.
2. A petition for the court to declare a
person dead must fully contain the details prescribed in Clause 2 of Article
312 of this Code.
3. The petitions must be accompanied by
evidences to prove that the persons who are requested to be declared dead have
already died in one of the cases specified by the Civil Code.
Article
336.-
Preparing for petition consideration
1. The time limit for preparing to consider a
petition for declaring a person dead shall not exceed thirty days as from the
date the court receives the petition; upon the expiry of that time limit, the
court must issue a decision to open a meeting to consider the petition.
2. Within the time limit for preparing to
consider a petition, the court shall issue a decision to stop considering the
petition if the petitioner withdraws his/her petition or the person who is
requested to be declared dead returns and requests the court to stop the
consideration of the petition.
3. Within ten days as from the date of
issuing the decision to open the meeting, the court shall open a meeting to
consider the petition.
Article
337.-
Decision to declare a person dead
1. The courts may accept or not accept
petitions to declare persons dead.
2. In case of accepting a petition, the court
shall issue a decision declaring a person dead. In such decision, the court
shall determine the date on which that person died and the legal consequences
of declaring a person dead according to the provisions of the Civil Code.
Article
338.-
Petitions to annul court 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 annulling the decision that has declared
such person dead.
2. A petition for the court to annul a
decision declaring a person dead must fully contain the details prescribed in
Clause 2, Article 312 of this Code.
3. The petitions must be accompanied by
evidences to prove that the persons who are declared dead have returned or are
still alive.
Article
339.-
Decisions to annul decisions that have declared persons dead
1. Within 15 days as from the date of receiving
a petition for annulling a decision that has declared a person dead, the court
shall open a meeting to consider the petition.
2. The courts may accept or not accept
petitions.
3. 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
XXV
PROCEDURES FOR RESOLUTION OF CIVIL MATTERS
RELATING TO COMMERCIAL ARBITRATION ACTIVITIES IN VIETNAM
Article
340.-
Civil matters relating to Vietnamese commercial arbitration activities that
fall under the jurisdiction of the court
1. Appointment or change of arbitrators;
2. Application, change or cancellation of
provisional emergency measures;
3. Abolition of arbitral awards;
4. Other civil matters prescribed by the
legislation on Vietnamese commercial arbitration.
Article
341.-
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.
Part
Six
PROCEDURES FOR RECOGNITION AND ENFORCEMENT IN
VIETNAM OF CIVIL JUDGMENTS OR DECISIONS OF FOREIGN COURTS AND/OR FOREIGN
ARBITRAL AWARDS
Chapter
XXVI
GENERAL PROVISIONS ON PROCEDURES FOR
RECOGNITION AND ENFORCEMENT IN VIETNAM OF CIVIL JUDGMENTS OR DECISIONS OF
FOREIGN COURTS AND/OR FOREIGN ARBITRAL AWARDS
Article
342.-
Civil judgments or decisions of foreign courts, foreign arbitral awards
1. Civil judgments or decisions of foreign
courts are judgments or decisions on civil, marriage and family, business,
commercial or labor matters, decisions on the property matters in criminal or
administrative judgments or decisions of foreign courts and other judgments or
decisions of foreign courts which are considered civil judgments or decisions
under Vietnamese law.
2. Foreign arbitral awards mean awards that
are rendered outside the territory of Vietnam or within the territory of
Vietnam by foreign arbitrators selected by the parties concerned to resolve
disputes arising from legal business, commercial or labor relations.
Article
343.-
Principles for recognition and enforcement of civil judgments or decisions of
foreign courts or arbitral awards of foreign arbitrators
1. Vietnamese courts shall consider,
recognize and enforce in Vietnam civil judgments or decisions of foreign courts
in the following cases:
a) Civil judgments or decisions of courts of
the countries which, together with Vietnam, have signed or acceded to
international treaties on this matter;
b) Judgments or decisions of foreign courts,
which are recognized and enforced under Vietnamese law.
2. Vietnamese courts shall consider, recognize
and enforce in Vietnam foreign arbitral awards if such awards are declared in a
countries or by arbitrators of the countries which have together with Vietnam
signed or acceded to international treaties on this matter.
3. Civil judgments or decisions of foreign
courts or arbitral awards of foreign arbitrators may also be considered by
Vietnamese courts for recognition and enforcement in Vietnam on a reciprocal
basis without requiring Vietnam and such foreign countries to sign or accede to
international treaties on such matter.
4. Civil judgments or decisions of foreign
courts or arbitral awards of foreign arbitrators shall be enforced in Vietnam
only after they are recognized and permitted for enforcement by Vietnamese
courts.
5. Civil judgments or decisions of foreign
courts, which are not requested to be enforced in Vietnam and against which no
non-recognition requests have been filed shall be automatically recognized in
Vietnam under the international treaties which Vietnam has signed or acceded
to.
6. Vietnamese courts shall consider the
non-recognition of civil judgments or decisions of foreign courts, which are
not requested to be enforced in Vietnam, only when there are petitions for
non-recognition thereof.
Article
344.-
Right to request the recognition and enforcement of civil judgments or
decisions of foreign courts or foreign arbitral awards
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 awards 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 awards exist in
Vietnam at the time when the applications are filed.
2. The involved parties, persons with related
legitimate rights and interests or their lawful representatives may file their
petitions requesting Vietnamese courts not to recognize judgments or decisions
of foreign courts which are not requested for enforcement in Vietnam.
Article
345.-
Ensuring the right to appeal or protest
The involved parties shall be entitled to
appeal or the procuracies shall be entitled to protest against court decisions
to recognize or not recognize civil judgments or decisions of foreign courts or
foreign arbitral awards to immediate superior courts for review under the
provisions of this Code.
Article
346.-
Ensuring the effect of Vietnamese courts’ decisions to recognize or not
recognize civil judgments or decisions of foreign courts or foreign arbitral
awards
1. Civil judgments or decisions of foreign
courts or foreign arbitral awards, which have been recognized and permitted by
Vietnamese courts for enforcement in Vietnam shall have full legal effect like
legally effective civil judgments or decisions of Vietnamese courts and be
enforced according to the civil judgment-executing procedures. Civil judgments
or decisions of foreign courts, which are not recognized by Vietnamese courts,
shall have no legal effect in Vietnam.
2. Foreign arbitral awards which have been
recognized and permitted by Vietnamese courts for enforcement in Vietnam shall
have full legal effect like legally effective decisions of Vietnamese courts
and be enforced according to the civil judgment-executing procedures.
Article
347.-
Notices on the results of petition consideration
Vietnamese courts shall, within fifteen days
as from the date of issuing decisions, notify through the Ministry of Justice
the foreign courts which have rendered the judgments or decisions, the involved
parties, individuals, agencies and/or organizations related to the decisions of
the results of consideration of the petitions for recognition and enforcement
in Vietnam of such judgments or decisions; and notify the individuals, agencies
or organizations that have filed the petitions and other individuals, agencies
or organizations relevant to the Vietnamese courts’ decisions of the results of
consideration of the petitions for recognition and enforcement in Vietnam of
foreign arbitral awards.
Article
348.-
Ensuring the right to transfer money or property for execution of civil
judgments or decisions of foreign courts or foreign arbitral awards
The State of the Socialist Republic of
Vietnam shall ensure the transfer from Vietnam to foreign countries of money
and assets for enforcement of civil judgments or decisions of foreign courts or
foreign arbitral awards, which have been recognized and permitted by Vietnamese
courts for enforcement in Vietnam. Such transfer of money and assets shall
comply with Vietnamese laws.
Article
349.-
Fees for recognition and enforcement of civil judgments or decisions of foreign
courts or foreign arbitral awards
Persons who file petitions for recognition
and enforcement in Vietnam of foreign courts’ civil judgments or decisions or
foreign arbitral awards must pay fee amounts prescribed by Vietnamese laws.
Chapter
XXVII
PROCEDURES FOR CONSIDERATION OF PETITIONS FOR
RECOGNITION AND ENFOREMENT IN VIETNAM OF CIVIL JUDGMENTS OR DECISIONS OF
FOREIGN COURTS
Article
350.-
Petitions for recognition and enforcement in Vietnam of civil judgments or
decisions of foreign courts
1. Petitions for recognition and enforcement
in Vietnam of civil judgments or decisions of foreign courts must be filed to
the Vietnamese Ministry of Justice and 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 the
head-offices must be fully inscribed; in cases where the judgment debtors being
individuals have no so residence places or work places in Vietnam or the
judgment debtors being agencies or organizations have no head-offices in
Vietnam, their petitions must also specify the addresses of the places where
exist the properties and assorted assets relating to the enforcement of foreign
courts’ civil judgments or decisions in Vietnam.
c) Requests of judgment creditors; where
foreign courts’ judgments or 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.
3. Petitions in foreign languages must be
enclosed with their Vietnamese versions which are duly notarized or
authenticated.
Article
351.-
Papers, documents accompanying the petitions
1. The petitions shall be accompanied by
papers and documents provided for in international treaties which Vietnam has
signed or acceded to. In cases where such international treaties do not so
provide for or are not available, the petitions must be accompanied by duly
certified copies of the foreign courts’ judgments or decisions; documents
certifying that such judgments or decisions have taken effect, have not expired
and should be enforced in Vietnam, except where these details have already been
clearly stated in the judgments or decisions; documents certifying that copies
of the judgments or decisions have been sent to the judgment debtors who have
to execute such judgments or decisions. In cases where the judgment debtors or
their lawful representatives are absent from foreign courts’ hearings,
documents certifying that they have been duly summoned are required.
2. Papers, documents accompanying the
petitions which are made in foreign languages, must be enclosed with their
Vietnamese versions which are duly notarized or authenticated.
Article
352.-
Transferring dossiers to courts
The Ministry of Justice must, within seven
days after receiving the petitions and accompanying papers and/or documents,
transfer dossiers to competent courts as provided for in Articles 34 and 35 of
this Code.
Article
353.-
Receiving dossiers and requesting additional explanations
1. Within three working days as from the date
of receiving the dossiers transferred by the Ministry of Justice, the competent
courts must accept them and notify the procuracies of the same level thereof.
2. The courts shall, within the time limit
for preparing to consider the petitions, have the right to request the
petitioners or the foreign courts which have rendered the judgments or
decisions to explain unclear matters in the dossiers.
The written requests for additional
explanations and written replies shall be sent via the Vietnamese Ministry of
Justice.
3. Within seven days after receiving the
written requests for additional explanations from Vietnamese courts, the
Ministry of Justice shall forward such requests to the petitioners or to the
foreign courts.
4. Within seven days after receiving the
written explanations, the Ministry of Justice shall forward them to the
Vietnamese courts which have requested such written explanations.
Article
354.-
Preparation for petition consideration
1. The courts shall, within four months after
receiving the petitions, make one of the following decisions, depending on each
specific case:
a) To stop the petition consideration if the
petitioners withdraw their petitions or the judgment debtors have voluntarily
executed the judgments or decisions or the judgment debtors being individuals
have died and their rights and obligations have not been inherited; or if the
judgment debtors being agencies or organizations have been dissolved or have
gone bankrupt and their rights and obligations have been dealt with under the
provisions of Vietnamese laws;
b) To stop the petition consideration and
return the dossiers to the Ministry of Justice in cases where such petitions do
not fall under their jurisdiction or the judgment debtors’ addresses or the
places where exist the assets related to the judgment cannot be identified;
c) To open meeting to consider the petition.
In cases where the courts request additional
explanations as provided for in Clause 2, Article 353 of this Code, the time
limit for petition consideration preparation shall be extended for two more
months.
2. The courts must open meetings within one
month after the issuance of the decisions to open meetings to consider the
petitions.
The courts shall forward the dossiers to the
procuracies of the same level for study within fifteen days before the opening
of court meetings. At the end of this time limit, the procuracies of the same
level must return the dossiers to the courts for opening meetings to consider
the petitions.
Article
355.-
Meetings to consider petitions
1. Petition shall be considered at a meeting
conducted by a Panel consisting of three judges, one of whom shall act as the
presiding judge under the court’s chief judge’s assignment.
2. The procurators of the procuracy of the
same level must participate in the meeting; in cases where the procurators are
absent, the meeting must be postponed.
3. The meeting shall be conducted in the
presence of the judgment debtors or their lawful representatives; if they are
absent for the first time for plausible reasons, the meeting must be postponed.
The petition consideration shall still
proceed if the judgment debtors or their lawful representatives have filed
their petitions requesting the courts to consider the petitions in their
absence or if they have been duly summoned twice but are still absent.
4. The Panel shall not re-try the case but
only examine and compare the civil judgment or decision of a foreign court and
the papers, documents attached to the petition with relevant provisions of
Vietnamese law and international treaties which Vietnam has signed or acceded
to in order to make decision.
5. After having considered the petition and
the attached papers and documents and listened to the opinions of the summoned
people and the procurator, the Panel shall discuss and decide the case by
majority.
The Panel shall have the right to issue a
decision to recognize and enforce in Vietnam or not to recognize the civil
judgment or decision of a foreign court.
Article
356.-
Foreign courts’ civil judgments or decisions which shall not be recognized and
enforced in Vietnam:
1. The civil judgments or decisions which
have not yet taken legal effect under the provisions of law of the countries
where the courts have rendered such judgments or decisions.
2. The judgment debtors or their lawful
representatives were absent from court sessions of foreign courts because they
had not been duly summoned.
3. The cases fall under the exclusive
jurisdiction of the Vietnamese court.
4. There has been a legally effective civil
judgment or decision on the same case, that has been made by the Vietnamese
court or by the foreign court but has been recognized and permitted by the
Vietnamese court for enforcement in Vietnam or the Vietnamese court has
accepted and been settling the case before it is accepted by a foreign court.
5. The statutes of limitation for judgment
execution have expired under the law of the countries where the courts rendered
such civil judgments or decisions or under Vietnamese law.
6. The recognition and enforcement in Vietnam
of the judgments or decisions of foreign courts are contrary to fundamental
principles of the Vietnamese law.
Article
357.-
Sending decisions of courts
As soon as decisions are issued under
Articles 354 and 355 of this Code, the courts must immediately send them to the
involved parties and the procuracies of the same level. If the involved parties
reside overseas, the decisions will be delivered to them through the Ministry
of Justice.
Article
358.-
Appeal and protest
1. Within fifteen days as from the date the
courts make decisions under Articles 354 and 355 of this Code, the involved
parties or their lawful representatives are entitled to appeal against such
decisions. In cases where the involved parties or their lawful representatives
are not present at the meetings to consider the petitions, the appeal time
limit shall be counted from the date they receive such decisions. The appeals
must clearly state the reasons for and the requests of the appeals.
In cases where force majeure events or
objective obstacles have disabled the involved parties or their lawful
representatives to lodge their appeals within the above time limit, the
duration in which the force majeure events or objective obstacles exist shall
not be included in the time limit for appeal.
2. The procuracies of the same level or the
Supreme People’s Procuracy shall be entitled to protest against court decisions
prescribed in Articles 354 and 355 of this Code.
The time limit for protest by the procuracies
of the same level shall be fifteen days and by the Supreme People’s Procuracy
shall be thirty days, counting from the date the court make such decision.
Article
359.-
Consideration of appeals, protests
1. The Supreme People’s Court shall review
decisions of the provincial-level people’s courts, which are appealed or
protested against, within one month as from the date of receipt of the
dossiers. In case of requesting the clarification as provided for in Article
353 of this Code, this time limit shall be prolonged but must not exceed two
months.
2. The composition of a Panel set up to
review an appealed or protested decision shall consist of three judges, one of
whom shall be assigned by the chief judge of the appeal court of the Supreme
People’s Court to act as the presiding judge.
The meeting to review the appealed or
protested decision shall be conducted like the meeting to consider petitions,
prescribed in Article 355 of this Code.
3. The Panel shall be entitled to uphold,
amend part or whole of the decision of the provincial level people’s court or
to stop the consideration of the appeal or protest if the involved party
withdraws his/her appeal or the procuracy withdraws its protest or if there
appears one of the grounds specified at Point a, Clause 1, Article 354 of this
Code.
The decision rendered by the Supreme People’s
Court shall be final one and take implementation effect.
Chapter
XXVIII
PROCEDURES FOR CONSIDERATION OF PETITIONS FOR
NON-RECOGNITION OF CIVIL JUDGMENTS OR DECISIONS OF FOREIGN COURTS, WHICH DO NOT
REQUIRE ENFORCEMENT IN VIETNAM
Article
360.-
Time limit for lodging non-recognition petitions
1. Within thirty days as from the date of
receipt of foreign courts’ civil judgments or decisions not requiring the
enforcement in Vietnam, the involved parties, persons with related rights and
obligations or their lawful representatives are entitled to file their
petitions to the Ministry of Justice requesting the Vietnamese courts not to
recognize such judgments or decisions.
2. In cases where the petitioners can prove
that due to force majeure events or objective obstacles they can not file their
petitions within the time limit prescribed in Clause 1 of this Article, the
duration in which the force majeure events or objective obstacles exist shall
not be calculated into the time limit for forwarding the petitions.
The restoration of the statute of limitations
for forwarding petitions shall be considered and decided by the chief judges of
the courts which accept the petitions.
Article
361.-
Non-recognition petitions
1. A petition for non-recognition of a civil
judgment or decision of a foreign court must contain the following principal
details:
a) The petitioner’s name and address of his/her
residence place or work place; if the petitioner is an agency or organization,
the full name and head-office address of that agency or organization shall be
fully inscribed.
b) Requests of the petitioner.
2. The petitions must be accompanied by valid
copies of the civil judgments or decisions of foreign courts and necessary
papers and documents to prove that the non-recognition petitions are well
grounded.
3. The petitions and accompanying papers as
well as documents in foreign languages must be enclosed with their Vietnamese
versions lawfully notarized or authenticated.
4. The sending of petitions and accompanying
papers to competent courts shall comply with the provisions of Article 352 of
this Code.
Article
362.-
Considering non-recognition petitions
1. The preparation for considering petitions
and the consideration of petitions for non-recognition of foreign courts’ civil
judgments or decisions shall comply with the provisions of Articles 354 and 355
of this Code.
2. The Panels for petition consideration
shall be entitled to issue one of the following decisions:
a) Not recognizing the civil judgments or
decisions of the foreign courts;
b) Rejecting the non-recognition petitions.
3. Foreign courts’ civil judgments or
decisions which do not require enforcement in Vietnam shall not be recognized
in the cases stipulated of Article 356 of this Code.
Article 363.- Forwarding courts’ decisions;
appeals or protests
The forwarding of court decisions; the
lodging of appeals or protests and the consideration of appeals or protests
shall comply with the provisions in Articles 357, 358 and 359 of this Code.
Chapter
XXIX
PROCEDURES FOR CONSIDERING PETITIONS FOR
RECOGNITION AND ENFORCEMENT IN VIETNAM OF FOREIGN ARBITRAL AWARDS
Article
364.-
Petitions for recognition and enforcement in Vietnam of foreign arbitral awards
1. Petitions for recognition and enforcement
in Vietnam of foreign arbitral awards must be sent to the Vietnamese Ministry
of Justice and contain the following principal details:
a) The judgment creditors’ full names and
addresses of their residence places or work places or their lawful
representatives in Vietnam;
If the judgment creditors are agencies or
organizations, their full names and head-office addresses must be fully
inscribed;
b) The judgment debtors’ full names and
addresses of their residence places or work places; if the judgment debtors are
agencies or organizations, their full names and head-office addresses must be
inscribed; in cases where the judgment debtors being individuals have no residence
places or work places in Vietnam or the judgment debtors being agencies or
organizations have no head-offices in Vietnam, the petitions must be clearly
inscribed with the addresses of the places where exist properties and assorted
assets related to the enforcement in Vietnam of the foreign arbitral awards.
c) Requests of the judgment creditors;
2. Petitions in foreign languages must be
accompanied by their Vietnamese versions lawfully notarized or authenticated.
Article
365.-
Papers, documents accompanying petitions
1. Accompanied with petitions shall be papers
and documents prescribed in international treaties which Vietnam has signed or
acceded to. In cases where international treaties do not prescribe them or are
not available, the petitions must be accompanied by valid copies of the foreign
arbitral awards and valid copies of the arbitral agreement among the parties on
the resolution of their disputes which may arise or have arisen through
arbitration procedures, provided that the laws of relevant countries stipulate
that they can be resolved through such procedures.
The arbitral agreement may be the arbitration
terms provided for in the contract, or a separate agreement on arbitration,
which has been concluded by the concerned parties after the disputes arise.
2. If papers and/or documents accompanying
the petitions are in foreign languages, their lawfully notarized or
authenticated Vietnamese versions must also be sent.
Article
366.-
Transferring dossiers to courts
1. Within seven days as from the date of
receiving the petitions as well as accompanying papers and documents, the
Ministry of Justice shall transfer the dossiers to competent courts as
stipulated in Articles 34 and 35 of this Code.
2. In cases where the Ministry of Justice has
already transferred the dossiers to competent courts but later receives notices
from competent foreign agencies saying that they are considering the
cancellation of, or have already cancelled or suspended the foreign arbitral
awards, the Ministry of Justice shall immediately notify the courts thereof in
writing.
Article
367.-
Receiving case files
1. Within three working days as from the date
of receiving case files from the Ministry of Justice, the competent courts must
accept the files and notify the judgment debtors being individuals, agencies or
organizations as well as the procuracies of the same level thereof.
2. The courts are entitled to request the
individuals, agencies or organizations that have filed the petitions to clarify
obscure details in the petitions.
Article
368.-
Preparation for considering petitions
1. Within two months as from the date of
accepting petitions, the competent courts shall, on a case-by-case basis, issue
one of the following decisions:
a) To suspend the consideration of petitions
in case of receiving written notices from the Ministry of Justice saying that
the foreign competent agencies are reviewing foreign arbitral awards;
b) To stop the consideration of petitions if
the judgment creditors being individuals, agencies or organizations withdraw
their petitions or the judgment debtors being individuals, agencies or
organizations have voluntarily executed the judgments; the judgment debtors
being agencies or organizations have been dissolved or gone bankrupt and their
rights and obligations have been handled according to the provisions of
Vietnamese law or the judgment debtors being individuals have died while their
rights and obligations are not inherited;
c) To stop the consideration of the petitions
in case of receiving written notices from the Ministry of Justice saying that
foreign competent agencies have cancelled the foreign arbitral awards or
stopped the enforcement thereof;
d) To stop the consideration of petitions and
return the files to the Ministry of Justice in cases where such consideration
does not fall within the courts’ jurisdiction, where the judgment debtors being
agencies or organizations have no head-offices in Vietnam, where the judgment
debtors being individuals neither reside nor work in Vietnam, or where it is
impossible to identify the places where exist the assets related to the
enforcement of the awards in Vietnam;
e) To open hearing sessions to consider
petitions.
In cases where the courts request
explanations, as provided for in Clause 2, Article 367 of this Code, the time
limit for preparation for petition consideration shall be extended for two more
months.
2. The courts must open hearing sessions to
consider the petitions within twenty days as from the date of issuing the
decisions to open such hearing sessions. The courts must forward the case files
to the procuracies of the same level for study within ten days before the
opening of the hearing sessions; at the end of this time limit, the procuracies
must return the case files to the courts for opening hearing sessions to
consider the petitions.
Article
369.-
Hearing sessions for consideration of petitions
1. The consideration of a petition shall be
conducted at a hearing session by a Trial Panel which is composed of three
judges, one of whom shall act as the presiding judge under the assignment of
the court’s chief judge.
2. Procurators of the procuracies of the same
level must participate in the hearing sessions. In cases where they are absent,
the hearing sessions must be postponed.
3. The hearing sessions shall be conducted in
the presence of the judgment debtors or their lawful representatives; if they
are absent for the first time for plausible reasons, the hearing sessions must
be postponed.
The consideration of petitions shall still
proceed if the judgment debtors or their lawful representatives request the
courts to consider the petitions in their absence or if they have been duly
summoned for the second time, but are still absent.
4. The trial panel shall not re-try the
disputes which have already been dealt with by the foreign arbitrators but only
check and compare the foreign arbitral awards and their accompanying papers or
documents with the provisions of this Code, other provisions of Vietnamese law
and relevant international treaties which Vietnam has signed or acceded to.
5. After considering the petitions and the
accompanying papers or documents and hearing the opinions of the summoned
persons and of the procurators, the trial panels shall deliberate the cases and
make decisions by majority.
The trial panels may issue decisions to
recognize and enforce the foreign arbitral awards or issue decisions not to
recognize foreign arbitral awards.
Article
370.-
Cases of non-recognition
1. Foreign arbitral awards shall not be
recognized and enforced in Vietnam in the following cases:
a) Parties to the arbitral agreement have no
capacity to sign such agreement under the law applicable to each party.
b) The arbitral agreement is legally invalid
under the law of the country, which has been selected by the parties for
application, or the law of the country where the awards were declared if the
parties had not chosen law applicable to such agreement;
c) The judgment debtors being individuals,
agencies or organizations were not promptly and properly notified of the appointment
of arbitrators and of procedures for resolution of disputes at foreign
arbitration organization, or could not exercise their procedural rights for
plausible reasons;
d) Foreign arbitral awards are declared on
disputes not requested by the parties for resolution or going beyond the
request of the parties to the arbitral agreement. In cases where the awards can
be separated into distinct parts on matters requested for resolution and parts
on matters not requested for resolution at foreign arbitration organizations,
the parts on matters requested for resolution may be recognized and permitted
for enforcement in Vietnam;
e) The foreign arbitration personnel or the
procedures for dispute resolution by foreign arbitrations do not comply with
the arbitral agreement or with the law of the country where the foreign
arbitral award is pronounced if the arbitral agreement does not prescribe such
matters.
f) The foreign arbitral awards have not yet
been legally binding on the parties;
g) The foreign arbitral awards have been
cancelled or suspended from enforcement by competent bodies of the countries
where the awards were pronounced or the countries whose laws have been applied.
2. Foreign arbitral awards shall also not be
recognized and permitted for enforcement in Vietnam, if the Vietnamese courts
deem that:
a) The disputes can not be resolved by
arbitration under Vietnamese law;
b) The recognition and enforcement in Vietnam
of the foreign arbitral awards run counter to the basic principles of
Vietnamese law.
Article
371.-
Forwarding court decisions
Immediately after issuing the decisions
prescribed in Articles 368 and 369 of this Code, the courts shall send the
decisions to the involved parties and the procuracies of the same level; if the
involved parties stay abroad, such decisions shall be sent through the Ministry
of Justice.
Article
372.-
Appeal and protest
1. Within fifteen days as from the date the
courts issue decisions prescribed in Articles 368 and 359 of this Code, the
involved parties or their lawful representatives may lodge appeals against such
decisions; in cases where the involved parties are not present at the hearing
sessions to consider the petitions, the appeal time limit shall be counted from
the date they receive such decisions. The appeals must clearly state the appeal
reasons and requests.
In case of force majeure events or objective
obstacles, which have rendered the involved parties or their lawful
representatives unable to lodge their appeals within the above time limit, the
duration in which the force majeure events or objective obstacles exist shall
not be calculated into the appeal time limit.
2. The procuracies of the same level or the
Supreme People’s Procuracy may protest against court decisions prescribed in
Articles 368 and 369 of this Code.
The time limit for a procuracy of the same
level to lodge a protest is fifteen days and that for the Supreme People’s
Procuracy is thirty days, counting from the date the court issues the decision.
Article
373.-
Considering appeals or protests
1. Within one month counting from the date it
receives case files, the Supreme People’s Court shall review a provincial-level
people’s court’s decision which is appealed or protested against. In cases
where explanations are requested as stipulated in Clause 2 of Article 367 of
this Code, this time limit shall be extended but must not exceed two months.
2. A panel for review of appealed or
protested decisions is composed of three judges, including one presiding judge
assigned by the chief judge of the appeal court of the Supreme People’s Court.
The review sessions shall be conducted like the petition-considering sessions
prescribed in Article 369 of this Code.
3. The Review Panels shall be entitled to
uphold or partially or entirely amend decisions of the provincial-level
people’s courts, to suspend or stop the review of appeals or protests in cases
where the involved parties withdraw their appeals or the procuracies withdraw
their protests, or where there appear the grounds prescribed at Points a, b and
c of Clause 1, Article 368 of this Code.
The decisions of the Supreme People’s Court
shall be the final ones and take implementation effect.
Article
374.-
Annulling recognition and enforcement decisions
1. In cases where they receive written
notices from the Ministry of Justice saying that foreign competent agencies are
considering the cancellation or suspension of foreign arbitral awards which
have been decided for enforcement in Vietnam, the heads of the civil
judgment-executing agencies shall issue decisions to suspend the enforcement of
the foreign arbitral awards and send such decisions to the courts which have
issued the decisions to recognize and permit the enforcement in Vietnam of,
foreign arbitral awards.
The heads of the civil judgment-executing
agencies may apply guarantee measures necessary for the continued enforcement
of the foreign arbitral awards if so requested by the judgment creditors being
individuals, agencies or organizations.
2. Immediately after receiving the written
notices from the Ministry of Justice saying that foreign competent agencies
have annulled or suspended the enforcement of foreign arbitral awards, the
Vietnamese courts which have issued decisions to recognize the foreign arbitral
awards and permit their enforcement in Vietnam shall issue decisions to cancel
such decisions and send them to the judgment-executing agencies.
Right after receiving the courts’ decisions,
the heads of civil judgment-executing agencies shall issue decisions to stop
the enforcement of the foreign arbitral awards.
Part
Seven
ENFORCING CIVIL JUDGMENTS OR DECISIONS OF
COURTS
Chapter
XXX
GENERAL PROVISIONS ON ENFORCEMENT OF COURTS’
JUDGMENTS, DECISIONS
Article
375.-
To be-enforced judgments or decisions of courts
1. The to be-enforced civil judgments or
decisions of courts are those that already took effect, including:
a) Judgments or decisions or parts of
judgments or decisions of the first-instance courts, which are not appealed,
protested against according to the appellate procedures;
b) Judgments or decisions of appeal courts;
c) Cassation decisions or reopening trial
decisions of courts;
d) Civil judgments or decisions of foreign
courts, foreign arbitral awards, which have been recognized and permitted for
enforcement in Vietnam under Vietnamese courts’ legally effective decisions.
2. The following judgments or decisions of
the first-instance courts shall be enforced immediately even though they may be
appealed or protested against:
a) Judgments or decisions on alimonies,
remuneration, reinstatement of laborers, wages, severance allowances, social
insurance or compensations for loss of lives, health or mental damage suffered
by citizens;
b) Decisions on application of provisional
emergency measures.
Article
376.-
Grounds for enforcement of court judgments or decisions
Court judgments or decisions shall be
enforced when there are the following grounds:
1. The to be-enforced judgments or decisions
prescribed in Article 375 of this Code;
2. The judgment-executing decision of
competent judgment-executing agency.
Article
377.-
Right to request enforcement of court judgments or decisions
1. In cases where the involved parties fail
to voluntarily execute judgments or decisions, the judgment creditors and the
judgment debtors shall base themselves on the courts’ judgments or decisions to
request the competent judgment-executing agencies to issue decisions for
judgment execution.
2. The persons who request the enforcement of
court judgments or decisions must file their application for judgment
enforcement or directly present to the judgment-executing agencies the contents
of their applications and information relevant to the judgment execution,
together with judgments or decisions requested for enforcement.
Article
378.-
Responsibilities of individuals, agencies and/or organizations in enforcing
court judgments or decisions
1. Individuals, agencies and/or organizations
shall, within the scope of their tasks and powers, have the responsibilities to
fully realize the requests of executors in executing the courts’ judgments or
decisions.
2. The presidents of the People’s Committees
of all levels shall, within the scope of their tasks and powers, have the
responsibilities to direct the coordination among the concerned agencies in
enforcing the courts’ judgments or decisions in their respective localities
according to law provisions on civil judgment enforcement.
The commanders of military zones and the
equivalent shall, within the scope of their tasks and powers, have the
responsibilities to organize the coordination among the concerned agencies in
enforcing the judgments in the military zones and the equivalent.
3. Public security offices shall have the
responsibility to maintain order and promptly stop acts of obstructing or
resisting the enforcement of court judgments or decisions. In cases where the
coercive enforcement measure is applied, the public security offices and
concerned agencies shall have to coordinate in realizing such measure at the
requests of the heads of the judgment-executing agencies or of the executors.
Article
379.-
Inspecting and supervising the enforcement of court judgments or decisions
The people’s procuracies shall, within the
scope of their tasks and powers, inspect and supervise the law observation by
the involved parties, the judgment-executing agencies, executors, and
individuals, agencies and organizations related to the enforcement of court
judgments or decisions in order to ensure the timely, full and lawful
enforcement of court judgments or decisions.
Chapter
XXXI
PROCEDURES FOR ENFORCING COURTS’ JUDGMENTS
AND DECISIONS
Article
380.-
Granting of court judgments or decisions
When court judgments or decisions must be
enforced under the provisions of Article 375 of this Code, the courts which
have pronounced such judgments or decisions shall grant such judgments or
decisions to the judgment creditors and the judgment debtors with the
inscription: "For enforcement."
The courts must explain to the judgment
creditors and the judgment debtors their rights to claim, the enforcement time
limit and their obligations to execute the judgments according to the
provisions of the legislation on civil judgment enforcement.
Article
381.-
Time limit for delivery of court judgments or decisions
1. For judgments or decisions to be enforced
under the provisions of Point a, Clause 2, Article 375 of this Code, the courts
which have pronounced the judgments or decisions must send them to the
judgment-executing agencies of the same level with the courts which conducted
the first-instance trials within ten days as from the date of issuance of such
judgments or decisions.
For decisions on the application of
provisional emergency measures, the courts which have issued such decisions
must immediately transfer them to the judgment-executing agencies of the same
level.
2. For judgments or decisions other than
those prescribed in Clause 1 of this Article, the courts which have pronounced
such judgments or decisions must transfer them to the judgment-executing
agencies of the same level with the courts which conducted the first-instance
trials within thirty days as from the date the judgments or decisions come into
force, except otherwise prescribed by law.
3. When transferring judgments or decisions,
the courts must enclose them with the records on distrainment or temporary
seizures of exhibits, assets or other relevant documents, if any.
Article
382.-
Explanation of court judgments, decisions
1. The judgment creditors, the judgment
debtors, persons with their rights and obligations related to the enforcement
of judgments or decisions of courts and the judgment-executing agencies shall
have the right to request in writing the courts which have issued the judgments
or decisions to explain unclear points in the judgments or decisions for
execution.
Within fifteen days as from the date of
receiving the written requests, the courts must make the written explanations
and send them to the requestors, the procuracies of the same level and persons
with their rights and obligations related to the enforcement of the court
judgments or decisions.
2. The judges making the decisions or the
judges presiding over the court sessions shall have the responsibility to
explain the court judgments or decisions. In cases where they are no longer
judges of the courts, the chief judges of such courts shall explain the court
judgments or decisions.
3. The explanation of court judgments or
decisions must be based on the minutes of the court sessions and the minutes of
deliberation.
Article
383.-
Statute of limitations for requesting enforcement of court judgments or
decisions
1. Within three years as from the date a
court judgment or decision takes legal effect, the judgment creditor and the
judgment debtor are entitled to request the competent judgment-executing agency
to issue a decision to enforce that court judgment or decision.
In cases where the time limit for fulfillment
of the obligations is specified in the court judgment or decision, the
three-year period shall be counted from the date the obligations are due; for
court judgments or decisions to be enforced periodically, the three-year time
limit shall be applied to each of period counting from the date the obligations
are due.
2. In cases where persons requesting the
enforcement of court judgments can prove that due to objective obstacles or
force majeure events they could not request the judgments enforcement within
the prescribed time limit, the duration in which the objective obstacles or
force majeure events exist shall not be counted into the statue of limitations
for requesting the judgment enforcement; for cases of postponing or suspending
the enforcement of court judgments or decisions as stipulated in Articles 286
and 307 of this Code, the postponement or suspension period shall not be
counted into the statute of limitations for requesting the judgment
enforcement, except for cases where the judgment creditors agree to let the
judgment debtors postpone or suspend the judgment execution.
Part
Eight
HANDLING ACTS OF OBSTRUCTING CIVIL
PROCEEDINGS; COMPLAINTS AND DENUNCIATIONS IN CIVIL PROCEDURES
Chapter
XXXII
HANDLING ACTS OF OBSTRUCTING CIVIL
PROCEEDINGS
Article
384.-
Handling measures applicable to defendants and persons with related rights and
obligations
In cases where defendants or persons with
related rights and obligations, who did not file independent claims, have
received court subpoena for the second time but are still absent from the
courts or from the court sessions without plausible reasons, they shall, on a
case-by-case basis, be imposed with caution or fines by the courts.
Article
385.-
Handling measures applicable to persons who commit acts of obstructing the
collection and verification of evidences by procedure-conducting persons
1. Those who commit one of the following acts
shall, depending on the seriousness of their violations, be imposed with
caution, pecuniary fines or administrative custody by courts or subject to
criminal case institution:
a) Forging or destroying important exhibits,
thus obstructing the resolution of cases by courts;
b) Providing false testimonies or documents;
c) Refusing to give testimonies, declining to
give expertising conclusions, or refusing to provide documents;
d) Deceiving, intimidating, buying off or
using force against witnesses in order to prevent them from standing as witness
or compel other persons to give false testimonies;
e) Deceiving, intimidating, buying off or
using force against the expert-witnesses in order to prevent them from
fulfilling their tasks or to compel them to give conclusions contrary to
objective facts;
f) Deceiving, intimidating, buying off or
using force against interpreters in order to prevent them from fulfilling their
tasks or to compel them to give untruthful, inobjective and/or wrong
translations;
g) Infringing upon the honor, dignity or
prestige of procedure-conducting persons; intimidating, using force against or
committing other acts of obstructing the procedure-conducting persons from
applying measures to verify and collect evidences as prescribed by this Code;
h) Other violation acts prescribed by law;
2. Public security offices shall have the
task to enforce courts’ decisions to hold violators in administrative custody.
Article
386.-
Handling measures applicable to witnesses who are intentionally not present
under courts’ subpoenas
1. In cases where witnesses have been duly
summoned by courts but have deliberately declined to go to courts or to be
present at court sessions without plausible reasons and their absence caused
obstacles to the collection and/or verification of evidences or the
adjudication of cases, the courts are entitled to issue decisions to escort
them to court sessions or to impose caution or pecuniary fines.
2. 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 shall have the
task to enforce the court decisions to escort witnesses. Executors of such decisions
must read out and explain them to the escorted persons and make records on the
escort.
Article
387.-
Handling measures applicable to persons who violate the internal rules of court
sessions
1. Persons who commit acts of breaking the
internal rules of court sessions, can, depending on the seriousness of the
violations, be imposed with caution, fines, forcible departure from court rooms
or administrative custody by the presiding judges.
2. Public security offices shall have the
task to protect court sessions, to enforce the presiding judges’ decisions on
forcible departures from court rooms or admistrative custody against persons
who cause disturbance at court sessions.
3. In cases where persons violate the
internal rules of court sessions to such an extent that they must be examined
for penal liability, the courts shall be entitled to institute criminal cases
according to criminal legislation.
Article
388.-
Responsibilities of the procuracies in cases where the courts institute
criminal cases.
1. In cases where the courts institute
criminal cases as stipulated in Clause 1 of Article 385 and Clause 3 of Article
387 of this Code, within ten days as from the date of issuing the institution
decisions, the courts shall transfer to the competent procuracies the
institution decisions and documents as well as evidences substantiating the
criminal acts.
2. The procuracies must consider the case
institution and the initiation of criminal proceedings against the accused
within the time limit prescribed by the Criminal Procedure Code. If the
procuracies decline such institution and prosecution, they must notify the
courts which have issued the decisions to institute the cases thereof in
writing, clearly stating the reasons therefor.
Article
389.-
Handling measures applicable to individuals, agencies or organizations that
fail to abide by court decisions on supply of evidences to courts
1. Individuals, agencies or organizations
that fail to abide by court decisions on supply of evidences they are managing
or keeping may be cautioned, fined or forced to do so under court decisions.
2. Individuals or heads of agencies or
organizations specified in Clause 1 of this Article can be disciplined or
examined for penal liability according to law provisions.
Article
390.-
Procedures, competence for imposing penalties, fine levels
Procedures and competence for imposing
penalties and fine levels for acts of obstructing civil proceedings shall be
prescribed by the Standing Committee of the National Assembly.
Chapter
XXXIII
COMPLAINTS AND DENUNCIATIONS IN CIVIL
PROCEDURES
Article
391.-
Decisions and acts in civil procedures, which may be complained about
1. Individuals agencies and organizations are
entitled to complain about procedural decisions or acts of civil
procedure-conducting agencies or persons when they have grounds to believe that
such decisions or acts are illegal or infringe upon their legitimate rights and
interests.
2. For first-instance, appellate, cassation
or reopening judgments or decisions of courts or other procedural decisions
issued by civil procedure-conducting persons, if being appealed, protested
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
392.-
Rights and obligations of complainants
1. Complainants shall have the following
rights:
a) To lodge complaints by themselves or
through their lawful representatives;
b) To lodge their complaints at any stage of
the resolution of the cases;
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;
e) 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, 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) To strictly abide by the
complaint-resolving decisions which have taken legal effect.
Article
393.-
Rights and obligations of the complained persons
1. The complained persons shall have the
following rights:
a) 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; 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 or address the
consequences caused by their illegal procedural decisions or acts as provided
for by law.
Article
394.-
Statute of limitations for lodging complaints
The statue of limitations for lodging a
complaint is fifteen days as from the date the complainant receives or knows
the procedural decision or the act, which he/she deems illegal.
In cases where complainants cannot exercise
their right to lodge their complaints within the time limit prescribed in this
Article because of force majeure events or objective obstacles, the duration in
which the force majeure events or objective obstacles exist shall not be
counted into the statute of limitations for complaint.
Article
395.-
Competence and time limit for resolution of complaints against procurators,
deputy heads or heads of procuracies
Complaints about procedural decisions or acts
of procurators, or deputy heads of procuracies shall be settled by the heads of
such procuracies within fifteen days as from the date of receipt of the
complaints. If disagreeing with the settlement results, the complainants may
lodge their complaints to the immediate superior procuracies. Within fifteen
days as from the date of receiving the complaints, the immediate superior
procuracies must consider and settle them. The immediate superior procuracies
are competent to make final resolution.
Complaints about procedural decisions or acts
of the heads of procuracies shall be settled by the immediate superior
procuracies within fifteen days as from the date of receiving the complaints.
The immediate superior procuracies are competent to make final resolution.
Article
396.-
Competence and time limit for resolution of complaints against the court
clerks, people’s jurors, judges, deputy chief judges, or chief judges
Complaints about procedural decisions or acts
of court clerks, people’s jurors, judges, or deputy chief judges shall be
settled by the courts’ chief judges within fifteen days as from the date of
receiving the complaints; if disagreeing with the settlement results, the
complainants may lodge their complaints to the immediate superior courts.
Within fifteen days as from the date of receiving the complaints, the immediate
superior courts must consider and settle them. The immediate superior courts
are competent to make final resolution.
Complaints about procedural decisions or acts
of chief judges shall be settled by the immediate superior courts within
fifteen days as from the date of receiving the complaints. The immediate
superior courts are competent to make final resolution.
The complaint-settling decisions of the chief
judges must be sent to the complainants and the procuracies of the same level.
Article
397.-
Competence and time limit for resolution of complaints against expert-witnesses
Complaints about acts in civil procedures
committed by expert-witnesses shall be settled by the heads of the expertising
organizations which directly manage the expert-witness within fifteen days as
from the date of receiving the complaints; if disagreeing with the settlement
results, the complainants may complain with the heads of the immediate superior
agencies managing the expertising organizations. Within fifteen days as from
the date of receiving the complaints, the heads of the immediate superior
managing agencies must consider and settle them. Their decisions shall be the final
ones.
Article
398.-
Persons who have right to denounce
Citizens are entitled to denounce to
competent agencies, organizations or individuals illegal acts of competent
procedure-conducting persons, which cause or threaten to cause damage to the
State’s interests or legitimate rights and interests of citizens, agencies or
organizations.
Article
399.- 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 competent agencies, organizations
or individuals to protect them from intimidation, repression or revenge.
2. Denouncers shall have the following
obligations:
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
400.-
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.
2. Denounced persons shall have the following
obligations:
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, address consequences
caused by their illegal civil procedural acts according to law provisions.
Article
401.-
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 judges, deputy-chief judges, heads or deputy-heads of the
procuracies, the chief judges of the immediate superior courts or the heads of
the immediate superior procuracies shall have responsibility to settle the
cases.
The time limit for resolution of a
denunciation shall not exceed sixty days as from the date of accepting the
denunciation; for complicated cases, the time limit for denunciation resolution
may be longer but shall not exceed ninety days.
2. Denunciations of illegal acts which show
criminal signs shall be settled according to the provisions of the Criminal
Procedure Code.
Article
402.-
Procedures for complaint and denunciation resolution
The procedures for resolution of complaints
and denunciations shall comply with the provisions of this Chapter and other
law provisions on complaints and denunciations, which are not contrary to the
provisions of this Chapter.
Article
403.-
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 responsibility before law 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
seriousness of their violations, be disciplined or examined for penal
liability; if causing damage, they must pay compensations therefor according to
law provisions.
Article
404.-
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 petition the courts of the same and lower levels, responsible
agencies, organizations and individuals to ensure that the settlement of
complaints and denunciations is well grounded and lawful.
Part
Nine
PROCEDURES FOR RESOLVING CIVIL CASES AND
MATTERS INVOLVING FOREIGN ELEMENTS AND JUDICAL ASSISTANCE IN CIVIL PROCEDURES
Chapter
XXXIV
GENERAL PROVISIONS ON PROCEDURES FOR
RESOLUTION OF CIVIL CASES AND MATTERS INVOLVING FOREIGN ELEMENTS
Article
405.-
Application principles
1. The courts shall apply the provisions of
Chapter XXXIV and Chapter XXXV of this Code to settle civil cases and matters
involving foreign elements. In cases where these chapters do not contain such
provisions, they are entitled to apply other relevant provisions of this Code.
2. A civil case or matter involving foreign
elements means a civil case or matter where at least one of the involved
parties is a foreigner or an overseas Vietnamese; or civil relations between
the involved parties being Vietnamese citizens, agencies or organizations but
the bases for establishing, changing or terminating such relations comply with
foreign laws, have arisen overseas or assets involved in such relations are
located overseas.
Article
406.-
Procedural rights and obligations of foreign individuals, agencies,
organizations
1. Foreign citizens, stateless people,
foreign agencies and organizations, international organizations (hereinafter
referred collectively to as foreign individuals, agencies and organizations)
are entitled to initiate lawsuits at Vietnamese courts in order to request the
protection of their legitimate rights and interests when such rights and
interests are infringed upon or disputed.
2. Foreign individuals, agencies and
organizations, when participating in civil procedures, shall have the same
procedural rights and obligations like Vietnamese citizens, agencies and
organizations.
3. The Vietnamese State may apply the
principle of reciprocity to restrict the corresponding procedural rights of
foreign nationals, agencies or organizations of the countries where their
courts restrict certain civil procedural rights of Vietnamese citizens,
agencies or organizations.
Article
407.-
Civil procedure-legal capacity and civil procedural act capacity of foreign
citizens and stateless people
1. The civil procedure-legal capacity and
civil procedural act capacity of foreign citizens or stateless people shall be
determined as follows:
a) Pursuant to the laws of the countries of
which the citizens bear the nationality; pursuant to Vietnamese law if citizens
bear the Vietnamese nationality and a foreign nationality; pursuant to the laws
of the countries where the citizens reside, if they each bears several foreign
nationalities, except otherwise provided for by Vietnamese law;
b) Pursuant to Vietnamese law if the citizens
permanently reside, work or live in Vietnam;
c) Pursuant to the laws of the countries
where the stateless people permanently reside, work or live;
d) Pursuant to Vietnamese law if the civil
procedural acts are performed in the Vietnamese territory.
2. Foreign citizens or stateless people can
be recognized as having civil procedural act capacity in the Vietnamese
territory, if they have no civil procedural act capacity under foreign laws but
have the civil procedural act capacity under Vietnamese law.
Article
408.-
Civil procedure-legal capacity of foreign agencies and organizations, and
international organizations in civil procedures
1. The civil procedure-legal capacity of
foreign agencies and organizations is determined under the law of the countries
where such agencies or organizations were established, except otherwise
stipulated by Vietnamese law.
2. The civil procedure-legal capacity of
international organizations is determined on the basis of the international
treaties serving as basis for the establishment of such organizations, their
operational regulations, or the international treaties signed by competent
Vietnamese agencies.
Article
409.-
Protection of legitimate rights and interests of involved parties being foreign
individuals, agencies or organizations
Involved parties being foreign individuals,
agencies or organizations participating in procedures at Vietnamese courts are
entitled to request lawyers to protect their legitimate rights and interests
according to the provisions of Vietnamese law.
Chapter
XXXV
JURISDICTION OF VIETNAMESE COURTS TO SETTLE
CIVIL CASES AND/OR MATTERS INVOLVING FOREIGN ELEMENTS
Article
410.-
General provisions on the Vietnamese courts’ jurisdiction to resolve civil
cases and/or matters involving foreign elements
1. The Vietnamese courts’ jurisdiction to
resolve civil cases and/or matters involving foreign elements shall be
determined under the provisions of Chapter III of this Code, except where this
Chapter contains different provisions.
2. Vietnamese courts shall settle civil cases
and/or matters involving foreign elements in the following cases:
a) The defendant is a foreign agency or
organization, which is headquartered in Vietnam or the defendant has a managing
agency, branch or representative office in Vietnam;
b) The defendant is a foreign national or
stateless person who permanently resides, works or lives in Vietnam or has
assets in the Vietnamese territory;
c) The plaintiff is a foreign national or
stateless person who permanently resides, works or lives in Vietnam, for civil
cases or matters claiming alimonies or parent identification;
d) Civil cases or matters related to civil
relations which are established, changed or terminated on the grounds
prescribed by Vietnamese law, or which happen in the Vietnamese territory but
involve at least one party being foreign individual, agency or organization.
e) Civil cases or matters related to civil
relations which are established, changed or terminated on the grounds
prescribed by foreign laws or which happen in foreign countries, but involve
all parties being Vietnamese citizens, agencies or organizations and either the
plaintiff or the defendant resides in Vietnam;
f) The disputes arise out of a contract with
the partial or full performance thereof taking place in the Vietnamese
territory;
g) The divorce cases with the plaintiffs or
the defendants being Vietnamese citizens.
Article
411.-
Exclusive jurisdiction of Vietnamese courts
1. The following civil cases involving
foreign elements shall fall under the exclusive jurisdiction of Vietnamese
courts:
a) Civil cases involving rights to properties
being immoveables in the Vietnamese territory;
b) Disputes arising out of transportation
contracts where the carriers have their head-offices or branches in Vietnam;
c) The divorce case between a Vietnamese
citizen and a foreign citizen or a stateless person if both spouses reside,
work or live in Vietnam;
2. The following civil matters involving
foreign elements shall fall under the exclusive jurisdiction of Vietnamese
courts:
a) Determining a legal event, if this event
occurs in the Vietnamese territory;
b) Declaring that a foreign national or a
stateless person has lost his/her civil act capacity or has had restricted
civil act capacity if he/she resides, works or lives in Vietnam and such
declaration relates to the establishment of his/her rights and obligations in
Vietnam;
c) Declaring that a foreign national or a
stateless person is missing or dead, if he/she is present in Vietnam at the
time of occurrence of events which constitute grounds for declaring a person
missing or dead, and such declaration relates to the establishment of his/her
rights and obligations in Vietnam;
d) Requesting by a foreigner a Vietnamese
court to declare that a Vietnamese citizen is missing or dead if such a
declaration relates to the establishment of rights and obligations of that
foreigner in Vietnam;
e) Recognizing that an asset in the
Vietnamese territory is derelict or recognizing the current manager’s ownership
over derelict immovables in the Vietnamese territory.
Article
412.-
Not changing the jurisdiction of courts
Civil cases or matters which have been
accepted for settlement by Vietnamese courts under this Code’s provisions on
jurisdiction must be continually settled by such courts 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 cases
or matters fall under the jurisdiction of other Vietnamese courts or foreign
courts.
Article
413.-
Returning the lawsuit petitions or petitions or stopping the resolution of
civil cases or matters if they have been settled by foreign courts
1. Vietnamese courts shall return lawsuit
petitions, applications or stop the resolution of civil cases or matters
involving foreign elements if foreign courts have already issued judgments or
decisions on the resolution thereof and the countries of such foreign courts
and Vietnam have signed or acceded to international treaties that provide for
the recognition and enforcement of civil judgments or decisions.
2. Vietnamese courts shall return the lawsuit
petitions, petitions or stop the resolution of civil cases or matters involving
foreign elements if foreign courts have already accepted such civil cases or
matters and the foreign courts’ judgments or decisions on such civil cases or
matters are recognized and enforced in Vietnam.
Chapter
XXXVI
JUDICIAL ASSISTANCE IN CIVIL PROCEDURES
Article
414.-
Principles for judicial assistance in civil procedures
1. Judicial assistance in civil procedures
between Vietnamese courts and foreign courts shall be effected on the principle
of respect for each other’s national independence, sovereignty and territorial
integrity, non-interference in each other’s internal affairs, equality and
mutual benefits and in compliance with the international treaties which the
Socialist Republic of Vietnam has signed or acceded to and with Vietnamese
laws.
2. In cases where the Socialist Republic
Vietnam and foreign countries have not yet signed or acceded to international
treaties prescribing the juridical assistance in civil procedures, the judicial
assistance in civil precedures may be accepted by Vietnamese courts on the
principle of reciprocality but must not be contrary to Vietnamese laws,
international laws and practices.
Article
415.-
Judicial entrustment
1. Vietnamese courts may judicially entrust
foreign courts or be judicially entrusted by foreign courts to conduct a number
of civil-proceeding activities under the provisions of international treaties
which Vietnam has signed or acceded to or on the principle of reciprocality.
2. Vietnamese courts shall decline judicial
entrustment from foreign courts in the following cases:
a) The exercise of judicial entrustment
infringes upon the sovereignty of Vietnam or threatens the security of Vietnam;
b) The exercise of judicial entrustment does
not fall within the jurisdiction of Vietnamese courts.
Article
416.-
Formalities for judicial entrustment
1. The judicial entrustment by Vietnamese
courts to foreign courts or by foreign courts to Vietnamese courts must be made
in written documents, which shall be sent to competent Vietnamese agencies
under the provisions of the international treaties which Vietnam has signed or
acceded to or the provisions of Vietnamese law.
2. After receiving the judicial entrustment
documents, the competent Vietnamese agencies must immediately send them to the
Vietnamese courts or to the foreign agencies competent to receive the
entrustment documents of Vietnamese courts.
Article
417.-
Judicial entrustment documents
1. A judicial entrustment document must
contain the following principal details:
a) The date on which the document is made;
b) Name and address of the entrusting court;
c) Name and address of the entrusted court;
d) Full name and address of the individual,
agency or organization related to the judicial entrustment;
e) Contents of the entrustment;
f) Requests of the entrusting court.
2. Judicial entrustment documents must be
accompanied by papers and/or documents necessary for the realization of the
entrustment, if any.
Article
418.-
Recognizing papers or documents made, issued or certified by foreign competent
agencies
1. Vietnamese courts shall recognize papers
and documents made, issued, or certified by foreign competent agencies in
accordance with foreign laws or outside the Vietnamese territory if such papers
or documents have been consularly legalized except otherwise provided for by
international treaties which Vietnam has signed or acceded to.
2. Papers and documents made in foreign
languages must be accompanied by their Vietnamese versions lawfully notarized
or authenticated when being sent to Vietnamese courts.
This Code was passed on June 15, 2004 by the
XI th National Assembly of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam at its 5th
Session.
CHAIRMAN OF THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY
Nguyen Van An |