Economic Disputes Resolving Models by Courts in the Post-Soviet Countries

Authors

  • ANDREY A. BUTYRSKY
  • LYUDMILA N. NIKOLENKO
  • NATALYA V. IVANYUTA
  • IRINA A. BUTYRSKAYA
  • YULIA V. KABENOK

Keywords:

commercial dispute, commercial court, settlement of commercial disputes, judicial system, Ukraine, Russian Federation, Republic of Belarus, Republic of Armenia, Republic of Lithuania, Republic of Kazakhstan.

Abstract

The article is devoted to the study of models for resolving economic disputes by courts in the countries of the post-Soviet space (i.e. individual countries). Commercial courts should be viewed as a product of the historical development not only of the Soviet Union but also of European states since commercial courts first appeared in Western Europe and then spread throughout the continent. In this article, the authors examined the judicial systems of Ukraine, the Republic of Lithuania, the Republic of Armenia, the Republic of Kazakhstan, the Russian Federation, and the Republic of Belarus. The choice of these states was made taking into account the fact that they were all part of the Soviet Union, that is, they had the same initial elements of the judicial system, but at the moment, economic disputes are resolved differently in all these states. Based on the results of the study, the authors conclude that the following models of resolving economic disputes by courts can be distinguished as 1) economic disputes are resolved by economic courts based on the norms of the Economic Procedure Code (in this case, the status of economic courts can be determined in the Constitution or a special law); 2) economic disputes are resolved by economic courts based on the norms of the Civil Procedure Code; 3) economic disputes are resolved by general courts based on the norms of the Civil Procedure Code, and 4) certain economic disputes are resolved by the bankruptcy courts based on insolvency legislation.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

Ablaeva, E. B. (2020). Specialized Economic, Financial and Administrative Courts of Kazakhstan: History, Current Status, Development Prospects. Lex Russica. 73(3), 121-134. https://doi.org/10.17803/1729- 5920.2020.160.3.121-134

Butyrskiy, A. A. (2013). The history of the emergence and development of economic legal proceedings in Ukraine. Law and Life, 11(3), 33-37.

Civil Procedure Code of the Republic of Armenia dated February 27, 2018 No. ЗР-110. Retrieved from: http://base.spinform.ru/show_doc.fwx?rgn=111767

Civil Procedure Code of the Republic of Kazakhstan dated October 31, 2015 No. 377-V. Retrieved from: https://online.zakon.kz/m/Document/?doc_id=34329053#sub_id=240000

Code of the Republic of Belarus on the Judicial System and the Status of Judges dated June 29, 2006. № 139-З. Retrieved from: https://pravo.by/document/?guid=3871&p0=Hk0600139

Constitution of the Republic of Armenia, adopted on July 5, 1995, with subsequent amendments on November 27, 2005 and December 6, 2015. Retrieved from: https://www.president.am/ru/constitution- 2015/

Constitution of the Republic of Belarus of 03/15/1994. Retrieved from: https://pravo.by/pravovaya- informatsiya/normativnye-dokumenty/konstitutsiya-respubliki-belarus/

Constitution of the Republic of Kazakhstan August 30, 1995. Retrieved from: https://www.akorda.kz/ru/official_documents/constitution

Constitution of The Republic of Lithuania. 25 October 1992. Retrieved from: https://www.lrs.lt/home/Konstitucija/Constitution.htm

Constitution of the Russian Federation, adopted on 12.12.1993. Retrieved from: http://duma.gov.ru/news/48953/

Constitution of Ukraine No. 254k / 96-VR, 28.06.1996. Retrieved from: https://zakon.rada.gov.ua/laws/show/254%D0%BA/96-%D0%B2%D1%80#Text

Constitutional Law of the Republic of Armenia ‘Judicial Code of the Republic of Armenia’ dated February 10, 2018 No. ЗР-95. Retrieved from: http://www.parliament.am/legislation.php?sel=show&ID=6166&lang=rus#4

Constitutional Law of the Republic of Kazakhstan On the Judicial System and the Status of Judges of the Republic of Kazakhstan dated December 25, 2000 No. 132-II. Retrieved from: https://online.zakon.kz/document/?doc_id=1021164/

Decree of the President of the Republic of Belarus of November 29, 2013. № 6. Retrieved from: https://www.pravo.by/document/?guid=3871&p0=Pd1300006&p1=1

Decree of the President of the Republic of Kazakhstan on the formation of specialized interdistrict economic courts in the city of Almaty and the Karaganda region of January 16, 2001 No. 535. Retrieved from: https://online.zakon.kz/document/?doc_id=1021369/

Decree of the President of the Republic of Kazakhstan on the formation of specialized interdistrict economic and administrative courts dated February 9, 2002 No. 803. Retrieved from: https://online.zakon.kz/document/?doc_id=1028554

Economic Procedure Code of the Republic of Belarus of 12/15/1998. № 219-З. Retrieved from: https://etalonline.by/document/?regnum=HK9800219

Economic Procedure Code of Ukraine No. 1798-XII, 06.11.1991. Retrieved from: https://zakon.rada.gov.ua/laws/show/1798-12#Text

Federal Constitutional Law ‘Commercial Courts in the Russian Federation’ dated 5.04.1995. Retrieved from: http://pravo.gov.ru/proxy/ips/?docbody=&nd=102035387

Federal constitutional law ‘The Supreme Court of the Russian Federation’ dated 05.02.2014. No. 3-FKZ. Retrieved from: http://www.consultant.ru/document/cons_doc_LAW_158641/

Filho, F. C., Trecenti, J. A. Z., Nunes, M. G. (2019). Numerical aspects of business court specialization: A Brazilian case study. International Conference on Advances in Business and Law (ICABL), 2(1), 101-107. https://doi.org/10.30585/icabml-cp.v2i1.241

Fisher, P. (2017). The Soviet Union’s Approach to Arbitration and Its Enduring Influence upon Arbitration in the Former Soviet Space. Russian Law Journal, 5(4), 129–150.

Kleandrov, M., Pluzhnik, I. (2018). Тhe range of administrative justice specializations in Russia and the other BRICS countries. BRICS Law Journal, 5(2), 24-48. https://doi.org/10.21684/2412-2343-2018-5-2-24- 48

Kochurko, Ju. V. (2017). The formation and development of the judiciary in Belarus: historical and legal aspects. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of Belarus, humanitarian series, 1, 113–118.

Kozlovskyi, S., Butyrskyi, A., Poliakov, B., Bobkova, A., Lavrov, R., Ivanyuta, N. (2019). Management and comprehensive assessment of the probability of bankruptcy of Ukrainian enterprises based on the methods of fuzzy sets theory. Problems and Perspectives in Management, 17(3), 370-381. https://doi.org/10.21511/ppm.17(3).2019.30

Law of the Republic of Armenia ‘Bankruptcy’ of January 22, 2007 No. ЗР-51. Retrieved from: http://base.spinform.ru/show_doc.fwx?rgn=90167

Law of Ukraine ‘The Judiciary and the Status of Judges’ No. 1402-VIII, 02.06.2016. Retrieved from: https://zakon.rada.gov.ua/laws/show/1402-19#Text

Law on Courts. Republic of Lithuania. 31 May 1994, № I-480. Retrieved from: https://Www.Teismai.Lt/En/Courts/Legal-Acts/655/

Silvestri, E. (2014). Judicial Specialization: In search of the ‘Right’ Judge for Each Case? Russian Law Journal, 2(4), 165-175. https://doi.org/10.17589/2309-8678-2014-2-4-165-175

Terekhova, L. (2014). Grounds for the Specialization of Courts and Judges in Russia. Russian Law Journal, 2(4), 176-186. https://doi.org/10.17589/2309-8678-2014-2-4-176-186

The Arbitration Procedure Code of the Russian Federation of June 14, 2002. Retrieved from: http://pravo.gov.ru/proxy/ips/?docbody=&nd=102079219

Downloads

Published

2021-04-30

How to Cite

BUTYRSKY, A. A. ., NIKOLENKO, L. N. ., IVANYUTA, N. V. ., BUTYRSKAYA, I. A. ., & KABENOK, Y. V. . (2021). Economic Disputes Resolving Models by Courts in the Post-Soviet Countries. The Journal of Contemporary Issues in Business and Government, 27(2), 4217–4222. Retrieved from https://cibgp.com/au/index.php/1323-6903/article/view/1338