International Law of the Shipmaster
CHAPTER 4
DOMESTIC LAWS AND THE SHIPMASTER
DOMESTIC LAWS AND THE SHIPMASTER
It is founded on the UNIDROIT Statute, 1940 and has 63 member states. UNI-DROIT has prepared many studies and drafts which have become conventions.45 The adaptation of uniform laws in states brings about economic efficiency and eases the often artificial impediments of trade. Despite improved statutory law, cases are often brought to courts that remain within a state’s law tradition, with the exception of the strongly religious law systems, which usually have a commercial an non-religious court for commercial cases. The disparity produces the tendency to forum shopping, choice of law clauses in contracts, and jurisdictional approaches such as the application of forum non convenience/alibi lis pendens doctrines.46 These approaches strongly interact with private international law or the conflict of laws, a part of the commercial law landscape that has seen a great deal of attention as one would suspect.47 However, as long as the outcome of a case with the same facts in State A is dissimilar to the outcome in State B, this disparity will continue.48 Practical proactivity can call for the contemplation of good choice of law clauses in a forum to the liking of the contracting parties.49 The Comité Maritime International (CMI or The Comité) is an NGO established in the late nineteenth century. It has a number of state associations.50 On the private side of uniformity of laws, the Comité proclaims itself as the first international organization concerned exclusively with maritime law and related commercial practices. Its “object is to contribute by all appropriate means and activities to the unification of maritime law in all its aspects.”51