Civil litigation in the United States is becoming an increasingly international practice, requiring litigants and courts to apply foreign and international law in order to resolve domestic cases. Discovery is one of the principal areas of civil litigation that requires collaboration across national lines and efficacy of court orders beyond jurisdictional boundaries. Although central to the practice of civil litigation in the United States, discovery is virtually unknown in most civil law jurisdictions, which creates a problem for obtaining necessary evidence from these countries.
This book considers the procedures for obtaining evidence in the United States through the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and the Hague Evidence Convention. The book then describes, in successive chapters organized by jurisdiction, the laws that enable foreign litigants to obtain evidence in the respective countries. Each chapter discusses the controlling law on foreign discovery, including the type of evidence obtainable, confidentiality and privilege, alternative dispute resolution, and costs.
Sprache
Dateigröße
ISBN-13
978-1-64105-509-3 (9781641055093)
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Brett has a general commercial litigation practice with an emphasis on restructuring, financial services, securities, corporate governance and cross-border matters. He is cross-appointed to the Commercial Litigation and Corporate Restructuring Groups. He has extensive experience dealing with cross-border litigation issues for both corporate clients and financial institutions and is an active member of the American Bar Association where he currently serves in leadership as co-chair Professional Development Committee. Brett is the editor of the firm's Cross-Border Litigation Bulletin.