The EU in our daily lives: Simpler processing of cross-border succession cases

Published: 22 December 2009 y., Tuesday

Europos Sąjungos valstybių narių vėliavos
More and more people make their homes and own property in EU countries other than the one in which they hold citizenship. This is leading to an increasing number of cross-border succession cases. EU citizens who are involved in such cases now confront a number of problems. It is common for cases concerning the same estate to be ongoing in several Member States, which is both time-consuming and costly. The European Commission has therefore presented a proposal for a regulation on succession that will make it easier for citizens.

The proposal contains provisions on the country in which a cross-border succession case is to be processed and on which country’s law is to be applied. There are also provisions on recognition and enforcement of decisions on succession within the EU. The establishment of a European certificate of succession is also proposed – a document that shows who succeeds a certain person or has the right to deal with the estate and that applies throughout the EU.

Today there is no EU legislation regulating cross-border succession. The Member States follow different rules about which country’s law is to apply and which court has jurisdiction. These differences lead to problems when authorities from more than one country are involved in the same case. It is also common for there to be parallel proceedings in several Member States.

The proposal will now be negotiated between the Member States. The negotiations began during the Swedish Presidency of the EU and will continue in the coming presidencies.

Šaltinis: europa.eu
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Sakharov Prize 2010 - 9 nominations

Nine nominations for the 2010 Sakharov Prize for freedom of thought have been tabled by EP political groups or groups of over 40 MEPs. more »

European Mobility Week 2010 urges you to leave the car at home and walk or cycle to work

As the primary source of daily noise, pollution and congestion, car traffic relentlessly erodes our health and quality of life. more »

Warming Arctic brings opportunities and threats

The European Parliament hosted the 9th Conference of Parliamentarians from the Arctic region from 13-15 September in Brussels. more »

Moving forward with European Mobility Week

Get on your (electric) bike! That's the message of some cycling groups who are currently holding an exhibition of electric bikes outside the European Parliament. more »

Newborn found on Philippine-bound plane

Philippine officials search for the mother of a baby, found dumped in a rubbish bin on board a Manila-bound Gulf Air plane. more »

Bangladesh prepares for Eid

Millions of Muslims in Bangladesh prepare to celebrate the end of the holy month of Ramadan. more »

EU revises laws to better protect animals used in scientific experiments

The European Parliament has voted to revise legislation on animals used for scientific purposes. more »

A dog’s life for daschunds in Poland

Sausage dogs take to the streets of Cracow in medieval fancy dress to celebrate the 600th anniversary of 'The Battle of Grunwald'. more »

Older women: Parliament calls for positive discrimination

EU Member States should take positive discrimination measures to improve the lives of older women, including paid leave for carers, says Parliament in a resolution voted on Tuesday. more »

Thousands attend al-Aqsa prayers

Tens of thousands of Muslim worshippers gather at Jerusalem's al-Aqsa mosque to celebrate 'Laylat al-Qadr' - one of the holiest nights of Ramadan. more »