Twelfth International Colloquium Vol. 1

Valencia and Gandia, 2008 Orality and writing in efficient civil proceedings. Vol. I


Twelfth International Colloquium Vol. 1

Metadata Summary – Detailed Version

General Information

  • Title (Original / English):
    Oralidad y Escritura en un Proceso Civil Eficiente / Oral and Written Proceedings: Efficiency in Civil Procedure
  • Editors: Federico Carpi; Manuel Ortells Ramos
  • Year: 2008
  • Publisher: Universitat de Valencia
  • Volume: I
  • Language: Spanish, with some contributions in English
  • Organizing Institution: International Association of Procedural Law (IAPL)


Summary

Context and Purpose

  • The document represents the proceedings of the IAPL Colloquium held in Valencia, Spain.
  • Focuses on the balance between oral and written procedure in civil justice systems globally, emphasizing efficiency, accessibility, and the modernization of procedural law.
  • Highlights the Spanish legal tradition and comparative perspectives from civil and common law systems.
  • Explores the evolution of civil procedure under technological, social, and constitutional influences, including telematics and secondary orality in modern courts.

Preface and Introduction

  • Preface (Federico Carpi):
    • Introduces the historical context of procedural law in Spain and Europe.
    • Discusses the philosophical and practical debate on orality versus written procedure.
    • Highlights Italian, German, and Spanish procedural scholars and traditions.
    • Emphasizes procedural efficiency, case management, proportionality, and the role of judicial discretion.
    • Notes the significance of the Tribunal de las Aguas as an exemplar of efficient oral proceedings.
  • Introduction (Manuel Ortells Ramos):
    • Provides rationale for selecting the colloquium theme and Valencia as the location.
    • Connects the discussion to constitutional guarantees of oral proceedings in Spain.
    • Presents the central thesis: an effective civil justice system requires a flexible balance of oral and written proceedings to maximize speed, fairness, and quality.
    • Introduces technological impact on procedural methods, including document management, video testimony, and electronic filing systems.
    • Outlines the structure of the volume: introductory reports, general reports, and national reports from various jurisdictions.

Structure and Sections

1. Introductory Reports

  • Víctor Fairén Guillén – The oral and efficient process before the Valencian Water Tribunal:
    • Provides a detailed historical and functional analysis of the Tribunal de las Aguas.
    • Highlights principles of orality, concentration, publicity, authority, minimal documentation, rapid decision-making, and enforceability.
    • Describes the tribunal's governance, the role of experienced community members as judges, and procedural rituals dating back to the 13th century.
    • Emphasizes efficiency, low cost, voluntary compliance, and cultural legitimacy.
  • Marcel Storme – More voice, less print:
    • Argues in favor of increasing oral elements in civil proceedings to enhance speed and procedural clarity.
    • Discusses comparative perspectives between oral traditions in common law and written traditions in civil law.

2. General Reports

  • Dieter Leipold – Oral and written elements within the introductory phase of civil procedure:
    • Analyzes the initial phase of civil proceedings and the strategic role of written submissions versus oral hearings.
    • Explores efficiency, case management, and judicial discretion.
  • Soraya Amrani-Mekki – Impact of new technologies on civil procedure:
    • Examines how telematics, electronic filing, and video hearings alter procedural norms.
    • Discusses opportunities for efficiency without compromising fairness or transparency.
  • Jorge W. Peyrano – Evidence between orality and writing:
    • Focuses on how evidence is presented in oral vs. written formats.
    • Discusses reliability, procedural economy, and the impact on judicial decision-making.
  • Michele Taruffo – Orality and writing as factors of efficiency in civil litigation:
    • Highlights empirical research on time, cost, and quality in oral and written procedures.
    • Discusses proportionality, procedural simplification, and the role of concentrated hearings.

3. National Reports

  • Spain (Alicia Armengot Vilaplana):
    • Describes constitutional and statutory frameworks for oral proceedings.
    • Highlights local practices and procedural innovations.
  • England & Wales (Stefan Einhaus):
    • Emphasizes case management reforms, pre-trial conferences, and the limited but growing role of oral hearings.
  • Japan (Manabu Honma):
    • Discusses hybrid systems with strong written traditions complemented by oral hearings.
  • Korea (Junghoo Oh):
    • Examines procedural modernization, court efficiency, and reforms promoting oral testimony.
  • Greece (Dimitris N. Maniotis), USA (Jakob Reinhard), Latin America (Pía Tavolari Goycoolea), China (Hongliang Wang):
    • Each report provides country-specific procedural norms, comparative observations, and efficiency strategies.
  • Italy, Brazil, Peru, Colombia, Germany, Venezuela, Uruguay, Chile, Argentina, Mexico:
    • Detailed examinations of civil procedural systems, highlighting orality, efficiency, and reforms.
    • Includes discussions on concentrated hearings, use of technology, procedural simplification, and integration of customary practices.

Key Themes

  1. Orality vs. Writing:
    • Evaluates the trade-offs between oral hearings and written submissions.
    • Focus on concentration, immediacy, transparency, and fairness.
  2. Efficiency in Civil Procedure:
    • Methods to reduce duration, cost, and procedural complexity.
    • Emphasis on proportionality, case management, and judicial discretion.
  3. Comparative Law Perspectives:
    • Contrasts civil law and common law systems.
    • Explores hybrid procedural solutions and lessons from international experience.
  4. Technological Innovation:
    • Role of electronic filing, video hearings, and digital evidence.
    • Concept of secondary orality: oral communication mediated by technology.
  5. Customary and Historical Examples:
    • The Valencian Tribunal de las Aguas serves as a living model of oral, efficient, and culturally grounded civil justice.
  6. Judicial Principles:
    • Orality, concentration, publicity, authority, simplicity, enforceability, integrity of judges, community legitimacy.

Notable Case Study – Tribunal de las Aguas

  • Historical roots: Established 13th century, continuous operation for over 800 years.
  • Procedural characteristics:
    • No formal written record during proceedings; decisions issued immediately.
    • Judges chosen for integrity and practical knowledge of community water issues.
    • Public hearings, concentrated arguments, oral evidence, rapid adjudication.
    • Enforcement via social compliance, minimal administrative intervention.
  • Significance: Demonstrates principles of procedural efficiency, fairness, community legitimacy, and minimal reliance on formal documentation.

Tags

Oral proceedings, written proceedings, civil procedure efficiency, case management, proportionality, comparative law, technological innovation, telematics, secondary orality, Tribunal de las Aguas, customary jurisdiction, procedural simplification, evidence presentation, judicial discretion, concentrated hearings.