Governing law
The body of law a contract designates to interpret and enforce its terms.
Definição
A governing-law clause specifies which legal system applies to the contract, determining how its terms are interpreted and which statutory rules fill the gaps. Choosing a familiar, neutral law reduces uncertainty in cross-border deals. Within the EU, the Rome I Regulation generally upholds the parties' express choice of law for commercial contracts, subject to mandatory consumer and overriding-protective rules.
Exemplo
A Dutch and a German company agree that their distribution agreement is governed by Dutch law.
Porque é um risco para a empresa
An absent or poorly chosen governing-law clause can mean a court applies a legal system neither party intended, producing unexpected outcomes on limitation periods, implied terms, or enforcement of exclusion clauses. For cross-border contracts, discovering mid-dispute that a different law applies can be costly and difficult to remedy.
Como gerir
- Include an express governing-law clause in every cross-border contract and pair it with a jurisdiction or arbitration clause.
- Choose a law your legal team knows well; picking a neutral third-country law adds complexity unless the deal genuinely warrants it.
- Check that mandatory rules (consumer protection, employment, competition law) of another country cannot override your choice.
Referências jurídicas
- Regulation (EC) No 593/2008, Art. 3 Rome I Regulation: freedom of choice of law
Salvo indicação em contrário, as referências remetem para o direito neerlandês (Burgerlijk Wetboek, o Código Civil neerlandês); os instrumentos da UE, como o RGPD, aplicam-se em toda a UE. Esta é informação geral, não constitui aconselhamento jurídico. Outras jurisdições tratam estes conceitos de forma diferente. Verifique o texto em vigor e a sua situação com um advogado qualificado.
Perguntas frequentes
Questões comuns sobre este termo.