How Does an International Litigation Lawyer Handle Cross-Border Disputes?

Практика:Corporate

Автор : Donghoo Sohn, Esq.



International litigation is the practice of resolving disputes between parties located in different countries or involving foreign legal systems, assets, or enforcement mechanisms.



The procedural complexity escalates when parties operate across sovereign jurisdictions, each with distinct rules on jurisdiction, choice of law, and recognition of judgments. A single procedural misstep, such as improper service of process abroad or failure to comply with foreign court requirements, can render a judgment unenforceable or expose a party to counterclaims in an unexpected forum. This article examines how international litigation unfolds, the jurisdictional and conflict-of-law considerations that shape strategy, and the practical challenges corporations face when pursuing or defending claims that cross national borders.

Contents


1. Core Jurisdictional and Enforcement Challenges


ChallengeCorporate ImpactMitigation Approach
Forum SelectionUncertainty over which country's courts have authority to hear the disputeContractual forum-selection clauses; early jurisdictional analysis
Service of ProcessDelays and potential invalidity if foreign service rules are not followedHague Service Convention compliance; local counsel coordination
Judgment RecognitionWin in one country but inability to enforce in another without separate proceedingsBilateral treaties; reciprocal enforcement agreements; asset location mapping
Discovery ConflictsForeign courts may restrict U.S.-style broad discovery; data privacy laws complicate document productionTailored discovery requests; GDPR and local privacy law review

Corporations engaged in cross-border transactions or operations must understand that winning a judgment is only half the battle. A U.S. .ederal court or state court judgment means little if the defendant's assets sit in London, Singapore, or Frankfurt, and that jurisdiction refuses to recognize the American decision. This reality drives the need for strategic forum selection and early coordination with international litigation counsel before disputes harden.



2. Jurisdictional Basis and Forum Selection


Courts must have jurisdiction over the defendant and subject matter to render a binding decision. In international cases, personal jurisdiction often turns on whether the defendant has sufficient contacts with the forum country, a concept called the "minimum contacts" test under U.S. .onstitutional law. Overseas defendants with minimal U.S. .resence may escape U.S. .urisdiction entirely, forcing a corporation to pursue the claim in a foreign court or accept the loss.

Forum-selection clauses in commercial contracts are the primary tool corporations use to lock in a preferred jurisdiction and governing law. These clauses typically specify that disputes will be resolved in New York courts or arbitration in London, for example. Courts generally enforce these clauses unless the party challenging them can show the forum is unreasonable or the clause was procured by fraud. Absent such a clause, a defendant can often choose among multiple potential forums, fragmenting the litigation across several countries and multiplying legal costs.



3. Service of Process and the Hague Service Convention


Proper service of process is a non-negotiable procedural requirement; failure to serve a defendant correctly can void the entire proceeding. In international cases, the Hague Service Convention, a treaty signed by over 75 countries, governs how documents are delivered to foreign defendants. The Convention establishes a Central Authority in each signatory country that receives service requests and ensures documents reach the defendant through official channels.

Corporations and their counsel must follow the Convention's prescribed methods, which often take weeks or months. Taking shortcuts, such as mailing documents directly to the defendant or hiring a private process server without Central Authority involvement, risks invalidating service and losing jurisdiction. Courts in New York and other U.S. .urisdictions scrutinize Hague Service Convention compliance closely, and a plaintiff who bypasses the Convention may face dismissal and sanctions.



4. Choice of Law and Conflict of Laws


When a dispute involves parties and conduct spanning multiple countries, the question of which country's substantive law applies becomes critical. A contract between a U.S. .orporation and a French supplier may be interpreted under New York law, French law, or even English law, depending on the parties' agreement and the court's conflict-of-laws analysis. The outcome can differ dramatically: remedies, liability standards, and available damages vary significantly across jurisdictions.

Corporations typically address choice of law by including a governing-law clause in their contracts. A clause stating "This agreement shall be governed by the laws of the State of New York" signals to courts that New York substantive law applies, even if disputes are litigated elsewhere. However, some provisions, such as those involving real property or regulatory compliance, may be subject to the mandatory law of the country where the property is located or the regulation applies, overriding the parties' choice.



Substantive Law Variations Across Jurisdictions


Consider a breach of contract claim. Under New York law, a non-breaching party can recover "expectation damages," which put the party in the position it would have occupied had the contract been performed, plus incidental and consequential damages if they were foreseeable. German law, by contrast, limits recovery to foreseeable damages and may not recognize certain types of consequential damages at all. A corporation suing a German defendant in a German court faces a lower ceiling on recovery than if the same dispute were litigated under New York law in a U.S. .ourt.

Intellectual property rights, employment law, and product liability claims present similar variations. A trademark registered in the United States does not automatically protect a brand in Europe; European trademark law has its own registration and enforcement regime. A corporation must understand these differences early, as they affect both litigation strategy and settlement value.



5. Discovery, Evidence, and Procedural Differences


U.S. .itigation is known for expansive discovery, where parties can demand broad categories of documents, emails, and witness testimony from opponents. Many foreign legal systems, particularly civil-law countries in Europe, do not permit such wide-ranging discovery. Instead, they limit parties to narrowly defined evidence directly relevant to contested facts, and they often place the burden on the judge to investigate rather than on the parties themselves.

When a U.S. .orporation litigates in a foreign court, it must adjust its evidence strategy to comply with local discovery rules. Producing millions of pages of documents to satisfy a U.S. .iscovery request may be impossible if the foreign court permits only specific documents. Conversely, a foreign defendant sued in a U.S. .ourt may face unexpected expense and burden from U.S.-style discovery, creating leverage for settlement.



Data Privacy and Cross-Border Document Production


The European Union's General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) and similar privacy laws worldwide complicate document production in international litigation. A corporation cannot simply dump employee emails or customer data into litigation discovery if doing so violates GDPR or local privacy law. Courts in the United States recognize this tension and may limit discovery requests involving personal data or require protective orders and anonymization.

Corporations must identify personal data in their document repositories, assess privacy law compliance, and coordinate with local counsel in the relevant foreign country before producing documents. This process delays discovery and increases costs, but it is essential to avoid regulatory penalties or contempt findings in multiple jurisdictions simultaneously.



6. Enforcement and Recognition of Foreign Judgments


A judgment rendered in one country is not automatically enforceable in another. To collect on a U.S. .ourt judgment against a defendant with assets in Europe, the judgment creditor typically must file a separate enforcement action in the European court, proving that the original U.S. .udgment meets the European country's recognition standards. These standards often include review of whether the original court had jurisdiction, whether the defendant received proper notice, and whether enforcement would violate public policy.

Some bilateral and multilateral treaties streamline this process. The Hague Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Judgments in Civil and Commercial Matters (not yet widely adopted) and reciprocal enforcement agreements between specific countries can reduce the burden. However, many countries do not participate in such treaties, and recognition remains uncertain.



Asset Location and Judgment Creditor Strategy


Before pursuing litigation, a corporation should investigate where the opposing party's assets are located. If the defendant's primary assets are in a country that does not recognize U.S. .udgments, suing in a U.S. .ourt may be futile. Instead, the corporation might file suit in the foreign jurisdiction where assets are held, even if that forum is less favorable on substantive law. This calculation requires early input from international subclass litigation counsel and asset investigators.

Judgment creditors also pursue post-judgment remedies such as garnishment, attachment, and receivership, but these mechanisms vary widely across countries. A U.S. .ourt order to garnish a defendant's bank account in Switzerland may be unenforceable without a parallel Swiss court order. Coordinating enforcement across multiple jurisdictions demands expertise in each country's procedural rules and often requires retention of local counsel in each enforcement venue.



7. Practical Considerations for Multinational Corporations


Corporations with international operations should implement contracts that anticipate disputes and allocate jurisdictional risk efficiently. A well-drafted forum-selection clause, combined with a choice-of-law provision and an arbitration clause, can reduce litigation costs and uncertainty. Arbitration, in particular, offers benefits in international disputes: a single arbitral award is generally easier to enforce across countries than a court judgment, and arbitration proceedings are private and often faster than court litigation.

Documentation and notice practices must account for foreign law requirements. A corporation that fails to provide timely notice of a claim or to preserve evidence in compliance with foreign procedural rules may lose the right to pursue the claim altogether. Early consultation with international counsel ensures that internal dispute-resolution processes and evidence-preservation protocols align with the legal requirements of all jurisdictions where the corporation operates.

Corporations should also evaluate the tax and regulatory consequences of international litigation. Settlements, judgments, and fee arrangements may trigger tax liabilities or regulatory reporting obligations in multiple countries. A corporation that negotiates a settlement without considering foreign tax law may face unexpected additional liabilities after the dispute is resolved.


20 Apr, 2026


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