Back to issue
Cover of: Legal Origin, Civil Procedure, and the Quality of Contract Enforcement
Holger Spamann

Legal Origin, Civil Procedure, and the Quality of Contract Enforcement

Section: Articles
Volume 166 (2010) / Issue 1, pp. 149-165 (17)
Published 09.07.2018
DOI 10.1628/093245610790711591
  • article PDF
  • available
  • 10.1628/093245610790711591
Due to a system change, access problems and other issues may occur. We are working with urgency on a solution. We apologise for any inconvenience.
Summary
This paper empirically compares civil procedure in common-law and civil-law countries. Using World-Bank and hand-collected data, and unlike earlier studies that used predecessor data sets, this paper finds no systematic differences between common- and civil-law countries in the complexity, formalism, duration, or cost of procedure in courts of first instance. The paper further finds that by a subjective measure, contract enforceability in common-law countries is higher than in French, but lower than in German and Scandinavian, civil-law countries. Given civil procedure's central role for the common-civil-law distinction, these findings challenge the distinction's economic relevance.