Article 61 — Recognition and Effect of Foreign Judgments
- A judgment rendered by a competent authority of a foreign jurisdiction is recognised in Kaharagia where:
- The foreign authority had jurisdiction under its own law and under principles generally accepted in private international law.
- The judgment is final and enforceable in the jurisdiction of origin.
- The parties were given reasonable notice and a fair opportunity to be heard.
- The judgment does not contravene the public order of Kaharagia.
- The judgment is not irreconcilable with a prior judgment recognised in Kaharagia between the same parties.
- Recognition is declaratory. The Royal Chancellery records recognised judgments and gives effect to them in the civil status register and other records of the State as appropriate.
- Kaharagia does not possess enforcement mechanisms of the kind available to territorial states. Where a foreign judgment requires enforcement, the parties must seek enforcement through the authorities of the jurisdiction in which enforcement is sought.
How to cite
CIVIL art. 61 — Article 61 — Recognition and Effect of Foreign Judgments, Legal Codes of the Principality of Kaharagia.