Lloyd's Maritime and Commercial Law Quarterly
THE PROVINCES OF CONTRACT AND TORT - BORDER DISPUTES IN THE CONFLICT OF LAWS
Wikingerhof v Booking.com
Andrew Dickinson*
As the United Kingdom’s membership of the European Union disappears in time’s rear-view mirror, it might be tempting to cast aside a judgment of the European Court of Justice delivered a little more than a month before the end of the implementation period, concerning an instrument (the recast Brussels I Regulation1) that forms no part of the body of retained EU law to be applied by the courts of this nation going forwards.2 The Court’s judgment in Wikingerhof GmbH & Co KG v Booking.com BV,3 and the accompanying Opinion of Advocate General Saugmandsgaard Øe,4 must not, however, be dismissed in this fashion. In staking out the previously hazy borderline between the rules of special jurisdiction in Art.7(1) (contract) and Art.7(2) (tort) of the Regulation, Wikingerhof elucidates the distinction between contractual and extra-contractual matters within the European private international framework to which the UK retains close ties through its unilateral decision to apply the Rome I and Rome II Regulations in matters of choice of law5 and its declared (but as yet unrealised) ambition to rejoin the 2007 Lugano Convention.6
The Booking.com website describes Hotel Wikingerhof as a Frisian-style hotel in the town of Kropp in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany. The website, based in the Netherlands, and the hotel management company entered into a contractual relationship in 2009 on the website’s standard terms. In recent years, the relationship had soured as a result of changes made to those terms. The hotel company commenced proceedings in the Landgericht Kiel seeking an injunction to restrain the website from undertaking certain practices that the claimant contended were an abuse of the website’s dominant position in the market
* Professor of Law and Fellow of St Catherine’s College, University of Oxford. I am grateful to Dr Tobias Lutzi (University of Cologne) for comments on this note.
1. Regulation (EU) No 1215/2012 on jurisdiction and the recognition and enforcement of judgments in civil and commercial matters [2012] OJ L351/1 (hereafter “Brussels I Regulation”).
2. Civil Jurisdiction and Judgments (Amendment) (EU Exit) Regulations (SI 2019/479), Regs 89 and 92; Agreement on the withdrawal of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland from the European Union and the European Atomic Energy Community (19 October 2019), Art.67.
3. (Case C-59/19) [2020] ECLI:EU:C:2020:950 (hereafter “Wikingerhof”).
4. [2020] ECLI:EU:C2020.688 (hereafter “Wikingerhof, Opinion”).
5. Regulation (EC) No 864/2007 on the law applicable to non-contractual obligations (Rome II) ([2007] OJ L299/40); Regulation (EC) No 593/2008 on the law applicable to contractual obligations (Rome I) ([2008] OJ L177/6); Law Applicable to Contractual Obligations and Non-Contractual Obligations (Amendment etc) (EU Exit) Regulations (SI 2019/834).
6. Convention on jurisdiction and the recognition and enforcement of judgments in civil and commercial matters (Lugano, 30 October 2007) [2007] OJ L339/3 (“Lugano Convention”).
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