Venire contra factum proprium: From a binding past to a binding future
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St Petersburg State University
Abstract
Inadmissibility of controversial conduct (venire contra factum proprium) is a continental functional
analog of common law estoppel. It is a special “pitfall” under the rubric for the application
of the bona fide requirement when inadmissibility of conduct is derived from its controversial
character in regard to previous conduct. The article exposes a lack of necessity in the prohibition
under the regimes of early private law codifications of the Modern Age (France, Austria)
which is why one may observe its prevalence primarily in Germany after the enactment of German
Bürgerliches Gesetzbuch (Civil Code). The author thinks of its prevalence as a result of a
drastic change in understanding the legal relationship induced by the restoration of corporate
thinking in a renewed form as opposed to individualistic thinking associated with Roman law
and the first draft of Bürgerliches Gesetzbuch. For the courts, the inadmissibility of controversial
conduct became a convenient means to justify the restatement of rules formally binding for
parties in cases where, as a result of the application of formal rules, the connection between
the conduct of a party to a legal relationship and its negative outcome, which under said formal
rules, totally fall into the other party’s burden. Due to this, the concept of a legal relationship,
previously built as mere correlation of a subjective right to liability, is complicated by an element
of burden — some of which would be imposed on the entitled party. This revealed the formal
side of inadmissibility of controversial conduct, which made it possible to correct what shall
be treated in terms of new thinking as a gap of regulation formed by individualistic thinking. In
material terms, the inadmissibility of controversial conduct is limited in literature to cases when
the previous conduct of a certain person has caused legitimate expectations from the counterparty
and the current conduct contradicts these expectations. The author refutes this reduction
since from the outset, the founding idea of the rule was to preserve the interrelation between
conduct and adverse consequences lost in the formal application of the law. The contradiction
of conduct, hence, shall be seen in using a formal legal position to prevent the adverse outcome
of one’s own conduct. However, development of this court practice revealed another function
of the rule, much more important in the author’s opinion, namely, the acceleration of civil communication
governed by private law.
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Translator alter. 2020. Venire contra factum proprium: From a binding past to a binding future. Pravovedenie 64 (2): 270–308.