I. INTRODUCTION
Taiwan has recently re-emerged as a focal point of international political debate and tensions between the United States of America and the People's Republic of China (PRC) have increased significantly.Footnote 1 At the same time, the shortage of semi-conductors, of which Taiwan is an important exporter, has served as a reminder of the vulnerability of globally integrated supply chains.Footnote 2 Given the attention Taiwan is currently attracting, it is timely to consider its status under the United Nations (UN) Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods (CISG).Footnote 3
The CISG has not lost its pull: with the recent accessions of Portugal and Turkmenistan, the Convention now has 95 Contracting States.Footnote 4 The much debated controversy over the application of the Convention to parties established in Hong KongFootnote 5 is now settled: the PRC (or ‘China’) has deposited a declaration with the UN to the effect that the CISG should apply to the Special Administrative Region of Hong Kong.Footnote 6 The extension of the Convention to Hong Kong has now shifted attention to the less discussed yet by no means less delicate question of its application to Taiwanese parties. Compared to the controversy over Hong Kong, the application of the CISG to Taiwanese parties raises questions that are more fraught politically and more intricate legally.
The issues concerning the application of the CISG to parties established in Hong Kong were mainly a function of diverging interpretations of Article 93 of the CISG: pursuant to this provision, the Convention applies to all territorial units of a Contracting State, unless this State has deposited a declaration excluding some of its territories from the application of the Convention.Footnote 7 After the ‘handover’ of Hong Kong from the United Kingdom to the PRC, the PRC did not make such a reservation in respect of either Hong Kong or Macao.Footnote 8 At the same time, it deposited with the Secretary-General of the UN two lists of treaties that should extend to Hong Kong and Macao, respectively, in each case without mentioning the CISG.Footnote 9 As a consequence, courts and scholars were divided on whether the omission of the CISG from these lists sufficed to exclude the application of the Convention,Footnote 10 or whether, absent any express declaration, the CISG also applied to Hong Kong and Macao.Footnote 11 In May 2022 the PRC deposited its declaration with the Secretary-General of the UN, clarifying that the CISG should apply to the Special Administrative Region of Hong Kong without, however, addressing the situation of Macao.Footnote 12 Pursuant to Article 97(3) of the CISG, the declaration took effect ‘on the first day of the month following the expiration of six months after the date of its receipt by the depositary’, ie 1 December 2022.Footnote 13 The controversy thus remains relevant for contracts involving parties from Hong Kong concluded before that date and, generally, for those involving parties from Macao.Footnote 14
With respect to Taiwan the situation is more complicated as its status under public international law is complex. The application of the Convention depends not only on the interpretation of Article 93 of the CISG but also on Taiwan's status under public international law, as well as on the interaction between Article 93 of the CISG and public international law more generally. Given Taiwan's importance to international trade relations, it is surprising how little its status under the Convention is discussed in case law and scholarship.Footnote 15 However, the issue has been raised recently in what appears to be the first judicial decision that has thoroughly discussed the status of Taiwan under the Convention: in Pulse Electronics, Inc. v U.D. Electronic Corp., the US District Court for the Southern District of California (the ‘District Court’ or the ‘Court’) found that parties located in Taiwan have their place of business in a Contracting State.Footnote 16 It is thus timely to discuss Taiwan's status under the Convention more thoroughly. Section II of this article starts by providing some background concerning Taiwan's history and its status under public international law before Section III explores the discussions on Taiwan's status under the CISG in both case law and scholarship prior to and as a result of Pulse Electronics. Section IV argues that, contrary to the District Court's decision, an analysis of Article 93 of the CISG suggests that the CISG cannot be extended to Taiwan. Section V concludes with some observations on future prospects.
II. TAIWAN'S STATUS UNDER PUBLIC INTERNATIONAL LAW
Taiwan's status has been described as one of the most ‘enduring problems of public international law’.Footnote 17 The historical origins of the dispute are complex, and what follows offers only a very brief summary.Footnote 18 Taiwan had been a part of the Chinese Empire since 1683,Footnote 19 which was at that time ruled by the Qing Manchu dynasty. It became a Japanese colony after the First Sino-Japanese War in 1895.Footnote 20 In accordance with the Instrument of Surrender of 2 September 1945, Japanese forces surrendered Taiwan to the Republic of China (ROC).Footnote 21 After its defeat in the Chinese civil war, the Kuomintang retreated to Taiwan, to which location it also moved the government of the ROC.Footnote 22 Despite its defeat, the Taiwan-based ROC upheld its claim to sovereignty over mainland China and was recognised by the UN and most Western States as the sole legitimate government of China, excluding the PRC from the UN and other international fora.Footnote 23 In 1971, a UN resolution effected the replacement of the ROC's representatives with representatives of the PRC.Footnote 24 Shortly thereafter, the United States of America recognised the PRC, acknowledged its ‘One-China-Policy’ and severed official diplomatic relations with the Taiwan-based ROC.Footnote 25 However, the United States also announced, in its 1979 Taiwan Relations Act,Footnote 26 that its policy was ‘to preserve and promote extensive, close, and friendly commercial, cultural, and other relations between the people of the United States and the people on Taiwan, as well as the people on the China mainland’.Footnote 27
Today, the status of Taiwan remains controversial.Footnote 28 According to the PRC's official ‘One-China-Policy’, Taiwan forms part of the PRC under international law.Footnote 29 On the international level, it is, for the most part, acknowledged that Taiwan is not a State in its own right as a matter of public international law.Footnote 30 It is not a member of the UNFootnote 31 and it is prevented from becoming a State Party to international treaties requiring statehood, such as the CISG,Footnote 32 in its own capacity.Footnote 33 However, contrary to the Chinese position, the internationally prevalent opinion considers that Taiwan enjoys a certain State-like autonomy, or describes Taiwan as a de facto regime.Footnote 34 In this capacity, Taiwan can conclude international agreements and participate in international organisations to the extent that they do not require statehood for membership.Footnote 35
For the purposes of the CISG, this lack of statehood prevents Taiwan from acceding to the Convention, Article 91(3) of which expressly restricts accession to States.Footnote 36 Even the most flexible interpretations of this provision, as advanced by some scholars,Footnote 37 would not include a de facto regime like Taiwan.Footnote 38 The decisive issue for the determination of Taiwan's status under the Convention is therefore whether parties established in Taiwan can be considered as having their place of business in the PRC and, thus, in a Contracting State to the Convention.
III. THE STATUS OF TAIWAN UNDER THE CISG IN CASE LAW AND IN THE LITERATURE
This section gives a brief overview of the discussions concerning the status of Taiwan prior to the recent decision in Pulse Electronics, before moving to a presentation of the District Court's reasoning in that case.
A. The (Lack of) Discussion Prior to Pulse Electronics
The application of the CISG to parties in Taiwan received surprisingly little attention in case law and academic writing prior to the US District Court's decision in Pulse Electronics Footnote 39 There are relatively few published cases involving parties with their place of business in Taiwan.Footnote 40 In those few decisions, there is no consistent approach to the application or non-application of the CISG. Some of the cases apply the CISG by virtue of Article 1(1)(a) of the CISG, that requires both parties to have their respective places of business in different Contracting States,Footnote 41 without reflecting on the status of Taiwan.Footnote 42 In Ideal Bike Corp. v IMPEXO spol. s.r.o., for instance, the Supreme Court of the Czech Republic relied on Article 1(1)(a) of the CISG to apply the Convention to a contract between a Taiwanese seller and a Czech buyer. The case turned on whether the contract had been validly concluded via email communications, despite the PRC's reservation under Articles 12 and 96 of the CISG.Footnote 43 Without mentioning the special situation of Taiwan, the Supreme Court noted that Article 11 of the CISG, pursuant to which a contract ‘need not be concluded in or evidenced by writing’, was not applicable as one of the parties had its place of business in a reserving State, ie the PRC.Footnote 44 Resorting to the applicable rules of private international law, it held that ‘Chinese law should be applied as regards the assessment of form’.Footnote 45 On that basis, the Supreme Court reversed the decision of the Prague High Court that had relied on Czech law as the lex fori on the basis that it had been unable to establish the content of Chinese law.Footnote 46 Given express reference to the address of the seller in ‘Taiwan, R.O.C.’,Footnote 47 it is surprising that the Supreme Court failed to address the issue of Taiwan's status in respect to both the application of the CISG and the applicable domestic law. Although the decision was given by the highest court of a Contracting State, this failure to discuss the status of Taiwan for the purposes of the CISG significantly reduces its precedential value for the question at hand.
Other cases, again without offering specific reasoning, treat Taiwanese parties as if they were parties from non-Contracting States.Footnote 48 In these cases, the Convention is either not applied at allFootnote 49 or is applied by virtue of Article 1(1)(b) of the CISG on the basis that the conflict-of-laws rules of the forum lead to the law of a Contracting State.Footnote 50 Despite the prominence of the controversy over the application of the Convention to parties in Hong Kong, the issue of Taiwan is also only very rarely addressed in academic literature concerning the CISGFootnote 51 and has even been labelled ‘a mystery’.Footnote 52 If the issue is mentioned at all, most commentators limit themselves to short statements for or against the application of the Convention to Taiwanese parties.Footnote 53 In practice, the issue is often solved by a choice-of-law agreement that may lead to the application of the Convention by virtue of Article 1(1)(b) of the CISG if the law of a Contracting State is chosen.Footnote 54 This may explain why the most relevant decisions concerning Taiwan's status under the Convention stem from States that have deposited a reservation under Article 95 of the CISG and are thus not bound by Article 1(1)(b) of the CISG.Footnote 55
B. The Reasoning in Pulse Electronics.
The first court to have extensively addressed the application of the Convention to Taiwan seems to have been the District Court for the Southern District of California in Pulse Electronics. Footnote 56 Pulse Electronics is hardly a typical CISG case: at the core of the dispute was a claim of patent infringement brought by a Delaware corporation against a Taiwanese manufacturer of communications equipment.Footnote 57 To determine whether such an infringement had in fact occurred, the Court analysed multiple international sales made by the defendant. The CISG became relevant as regards the question of the law potentially governing the place of the sale.Footnote 58 The Court thus asked the parties to submit briefs on the applicability of the CISG. While the plaintiff did not address the issue, the defendant argued that the CISG was applicable to its contracts with buyers established in the United States.Footnote 59
The Court adopted the arguments of the defendant and held the CISG to be applicable to sales contracts between the Taiwanese seller and buyers in the United States and other Contracting States.Footnote 60 The court ruling starts with the observation that there is ‘no binding or even persuasive case law on whether the CISG applies to a contract with a Taiwanese party’.Footnote 61 In its reasoning to extend the Convention's application to Taiwan, the Court pursued two independent lines of argument. First, the Court observed that Taiwan was not recognised as a State by the US government.Footnote 62 It then goes on to note, without further explanation, that Taiwan's legal status was ‘confusing’.Footnote 63
To overcome this confusion, the Court had resort to Article 93 of the CISG, pursuant to which a Contracting State with two or more territorial units may declare that the Convention should not extend to certain territorial units. Noting that China has not submitted such a declaration in respect of Taiwan, the Court applied the default rule found in Article 93(4) of the CISG, which provides for the application of the Convention to all of the PRC's territories, including Taiwan.Footnote 64 Secondly, at the invitation of the defendant, the Court gave policy reasons for the application of the Convention to Taiwan, noting that the extension of the CISG to Taiwan served the Convention's purpose of creating uniformity at the international level.Footnote 65 More specifically, the Court cited Chinese case law treating sales contracts involving parties from Taiwan as ‘foreign-related cases’ to which the CISG may be applied.Footnote 66 This led the Court to conclude that the application of the CISG to Taiwanese parties ‘is not in direct contravention of either China or Taiwan's desires’.Footnote 67
This first reasoned judicial exploration of the issue led the District Court to extend the application of the Convention to Taiwanese parties, thus confirming some of the few existing statements in the literature concerning the CISG.Footnote 68 However, and contrary to that reasoning, the following section will argue that the application of the Convention can neither be justified on the basis of Article 93 of the CISG nor on the basis of policy arguments.
IV. THE LIMITED ROLE OF THE CISG IN DETERMINING THE STATUS OF TAIWAN
This section shows that, contrary to the District Court's conclusions, Article 93 of the CISG does not address the issue of Taiwan's status, which should be determined on the basis of public international law. It will then consider existing case law concerning other international conventions, before refuting the policy arguments raised by the District Court in Pulse Electronics. Finally, it will suggest a way forward for courts of Contracting States that are confronted with the potential application of the Convention to Taiwanese parties.
A. The Inconclusiveness of Article 93 of the CISG
As noted by the District Court, the Convention seems, at first sight, to contain a provision which addresses the situation of China and Taiwan: pursuant to Article 93(1) of the CISG, a Contracting State that has two or more territorial units may declare to which of these units the application of the Convention should extend. Absent such declaration, the Convention applies to all of the State's territorial units.Footnote 69 There is therefore a presumption that the Convention applies to all territories of a Contracting State, but Article 93(1) of the CISG, as a ‘federal-State-clause’,Footnote 70 permits States to exclude the application of the Convention to some of its territories. As a general matter, the PRC falls within the scope of Article 93(1) of the CISG since it is a Contracting State with two or more territorial units, at least with respect to Hong Kong and Macao.Footnote 71 Accordingly, the provision was at the core of the controversy over the application of the CISG to these territories.Footnote 72
However, as regards Hong Kong and Macao, it was undisputed that they formed parts of the PRC under international law.Footnote 73 Conversely, the question with respect to Taiwan is precisely whether it does in fact constitute a territorial unit of China for the purposes of Article 93(1) of the CISG. Despite its extensive discussion of Article 93 of the CISG, the District Court spends very little time on this question.Footnote 74 In light of the importance of this provision in the Court's reasoning, it is worth taking a closer look at it in order to determine whether Taiwan can be considered a territorial unit of the PRC under the Convention.
Article 93 of the CISG provides for one of the few permissible reservations under the Convention.Footnote 75 Contrary to the default rule in Article 19 of the Vienna Convention of the Law of Treaties,Footnote 76 the CISG prohibits any reservations other than those expressly provided for in its Articles 92–96.Footnote 77 The purpose of this is to prevent the fragmentation of the Convention and to preserve its uniformity of application, as mandated by Article 7(1) of the CISG.Footnote 78 As exceptions to this general prohibition, the reservations in Articles 92–96 are tailored to address very specific situations. They contain objective requirements which need to be fulfilled in order for the reservation to be permissible.Footnote 79 In the case of Article 93 of the CISG, the requirement is that the ‘Contracting State has two or more units in which, according to its constitution, different systems of law are applicable in relation to the matters dealt with in this Convention’.
On the face of it, Article 93 of the CISG does not provide much guidance concerning what can be considered a territorial unit of a Contracting State. As regards Taiwan, the requirement can be broken down into three elements: the entity in question must be a ‘territorial unit’, different systems of law must be applicable in the different territorial units of the Contracting State, and the unit must belong to the Contracting State in question. Although less explicit in the text, the third criterion clearly emerges from a close reading of Article 93(1) of the CISG. The English version uses the verb ‘have’ in its possessive function (‘If a Contracting State has’)Footnote 80 while the French and Spanish versions use verbs that reference the composition of the State (‘comprend’, ‘integrado’).Footnote 81 This is reinforced by the use of possessive pronouns in the course of the sentence.Footnote 82 This choice of language, although not specifically tailored to the problem of contested territories, was deliberately used to identify a particular State and its territories clearly.Footnote 83
Legal scholars have developed criteria for the first two of these three elements: in order to be considered a territorial unit under Article 93 of the CISG, an entity needs to have a certain degree of autonomy.Footnote 84 Depending on the constitution of the Contracting State, various types of territories are considered to be covered by the provision, provided that different systems of law apply to the issues governed by the CISG.Footnote 85 It is the third question that seems particularly difficult to answer. Judging by the travaux préparatoires, the drafters of the Convention did not anticipate that it would ever be controversial whether a territory belonged to a Contracting State or not.Footnote 86
Article 93 of the CISG was included at the request of Canada and Australia, both of which consist of multiple territorial units with distinct private law systems.Footnote 87 In the drafting process, the most controversial issue was whether the reservation should be restricted to federal States that lack federal authority to legislate in some of the matters covered by the Convention or whether it should enable States to choose in which of its territories the Convention should be applied.Footnote 88 In this context, there was no need for the drafters to specify further the criteria for determining whether a territory belonged to a Contracting State.Footnote 89 The Chinese delegation, which could have raised the issue of Taiwan, does not seem to have intervened.Footnote 90 Hence, neither the text nor the genesis of the provision offers guidance concerning the resolution of disputes over contested territories.
Given this lack of guidance, one solution could be simply to defer to the declarations made by the Contracting State in question. If, for instance, China were to make a declaration concerning Taiwan under Article 93 of the CISG, other Contracting States could be considered as bound by the determination set out in that declaration. Such deference would effectively lead to vesting the declaring State with a discretionary power to determine the status of contested territories under the Convention. At first glance, the reference to the Contracting State's constitution in Article 93(1) of the CISGFootnote 91 could be understood to mean that the status of a contested territory should be exclusively defined by the Contracting State's constitutional law. Taiwan's status would then depend on the constitution of the PRC.
However, the mention of the State's constitution in the text of Article 93(1) of the CISG serves an entirely different function: its purpose is to restrict the eligible territories of a Contracting State under Article 93(1) of the CISG to those which are constitutionally vested with autonomy in relation to those matters governed by the Convention.Footnote 92 More importantly, this deferential solution would be fundamentally at odds with the decision of the drafters of the Convention to restrict the permissible reservations to those enumerated in Articles 92–96 and to subject reservations under Article 93 of the CISG to objective criteria. States can therefore not define the status of contested territories in their declarations. If a Contracting State were to issue such a declaration concerning a territory that does not form part of that State, the declaration would contradict Articles 93 and 98 of the CISG. The legal consequences of such impermissible reservations are, in principle, governed by public international law.Footnote 93 For current purposes, it suffices to say that a declaration concerning Taiwan would give rise to a very different situation from that of other cases in which the requirements of Articles 92–96 of the CISG are not fulfilled, as it is doubtful whether the PRC can issue binding declarations concerning Taiwan.Footnote 94
A close reading of Article 93(1) of the CISG thus confirms that the territorial unit of the declaring State needs to belong to that State. However, neither the provision itself nor the general principles of the CISG seem to offer criteria for determining the status of contested territories. In the language of Article 7(2) of the CISG, this question is not settled in the Convention.Footnote 95 One therefore has to turn to the otherwise applicable law which is, in this case, public international law.Footnote 96 In the present context, the issue under international law is, simply put, whether international treaties to which China is a State Party also extend to Taiwan.Footnote 97
B. The Intricacies of Extending Treaties Acceded to by China to Taiwan
The question of whether the PRC's accession to international treaties also binds Taiwan has been raised with respect to a number of different treaties in US courts.Footnote 98 While the District Court for the Eastern District of Wisconsin held Taiwan to be bound by the accession of the PRC to the 1929 Warsaw Convention on Air TransportFootnote 99 (hereinafter Warsaw Convention),Footnote 100 the District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, shortly thereafter, declined to find that the 1965 Hague Service ConventionFootnote 101 was applicable to Taiwan, expressly rejecting the reasoning adopted by the Wisconsin court as ‘flawed’.Footnote 102 Only a few years later, the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit took the opportunity to address this issue thoroughly in its decision in Mingtai Fire & Marine Insurance Co., Ltd. v United Parcel Service.Footnote 103
The Court of Appeals was faced with the question of whether China's accession to the Warsaw Convention should also bind Taiwan. As it noted, the PRC's accession to the Warsaw Convention was accompanied by a declaration that the Convention ‘shall of course apply to the entire Chinese territory including Taiwan’.Footnote 104 This assertion led the District Court in Atlantic Mutual Insurance to conclude that the Warsaw Convention extended to Taiwan.Footnote 105 Despite this declaration, the Court of Appeals in Mingtai Fire & Marine Insurance held that Taiwan was not bound by China's accession to the Warsaw Convention.Footnote 106
In its decision, the Ninth Circuit largely deferred to the position of the US government, noting that holding otherwise ‘would be an intrusion into the political sphere’.Footnote 107 In establishing the separate treatment of China and Taiwan by the US government, it cites lists of treaties published by the State Department which distinguish between ‘China’ and ‘China (Taiwan)’,Footnote 108 but the court also relied on amicus briefs submitted by the US government in the proceedings.Footnote 109 Finally, the Court of Appeals noted that it was not ‘independently determin[ing] the status of Taiwan’ but merely ‘defer[ing] to the political departments’ position’.Footnote 110 While this important caveat certainly reduces the precedential value of the decision at the international level, it is striking that the District Court in Pulse Electronics addresses neither this landmark decision from its own circuit court nor the legal intricacies raised in both that opinion and in the previous and subsequent judgments given by various other District Courts.Footnote 111
Looking beyond the US case law, courts from other jurisdictions have also considered Taiwan not bound by international treaties signed by the PRC.Footnote 112 This separate treatment of the PRC and the ROC can also be seen in the practice of international organisations.Footnote 113 For instance, under the name of Chinese Taipei, Taiwan joined the World Trade Organization (WTO) in 2002 as a ‘separate customs territory’.Footnote 114 It also remained a member of the Asian Development Bank after the accession of the PRC in 1986, albeit being listed from then on as ‘Taipei, China’.Footnote 115
The Ninth Circuit's decision in Mingtai Fire & Marine Insurance and the subsequent decisions from different jurisdictions, as well as the practice in international organisations, seem to suggest that the case for generally extending the application of treaties to which the PRC has acceded is difficult to make. The question therefore becomes whether, as the District Court suggests, there are indeed specific policy arguments in the context of the CISG that justify the extension of the Convention to Taiwanese parties.
C. The Fallacy of the Policy Arguments in Pulse Electronics
Mindful of the ‘confusing’ nature of Taiwan's status, the District Court was more comfortable focusing on the policy implications of an extension of the CISG to Taiwan. It noted that the CISG was meant to create worldwide uniformity in sales law. On its own, this argument is a non sequitur, as the purpose of the Convention cannot justify its extension beyond its Contracting States. A more charitable understanding of the argument could be that the Convention's aim of creating worldwide uniformity of sales law for the benefit of private parties justifies being more generous when determining the Convention's territorial reach than in the case of other international treaties.Footnote 116 In other words, in instances of doubt, the goal of promoting uniformity in international sales law might tip the balance in favour of the application of the Convention.Footnote 117 This argument, however, overstretches the underlying reasoning: while the purpose of the Convention may favour a generous construction of its sphere of application in certain cases, it cannot justify its application when, as in the case of Taiwan, it is already doubtful whether the accession of a Contracting State is binding on the territory in question.Footnote 118
The second policy argument advanced in Pulse Electronics is that the CISG has been applied by Chinese courts in cases involving Taiwanese parties. This led the District Court to conclude that the application of the Convention was not against the wish of either China or Taiwan.Footnote 119 As set out by the Court, it is difficult to find this argument persuasive. First, the court cited an arbitral award rendered under the auspices of the China International Economic and Trade Arbitration Commission (CIETAC) in which the application of the Convention had been agreed upon by the parties.Footnote 120 It is thus of very little value when considering the more general question concerning the application of the Convention absent a choice-of-law clause. Secondly, it is difficult to see how the application of the Convention to a contract between a Chinese and a Taiwanese party advances the argument for extending the scope of the Convention: if Taiwan formed part of the PRC, such a sales contract would not be international for the purposes of Article 1(1) of the CISG.Footnote 121 This is confirmed by other Chinese decisions that, in the absence of a choice-of-law clause, expressly reject the application of the CISG on the grounds that the dispute does not involve parties from different States.Footnote 122 Thirdly, and most importantly, it is difficult to see how the Court can construe a single arbitral award as speaking to the ‘desires of China and Taiwan’ under public international law.
A more generous reconstruction of the District Court's argument could lead to a more nuanced and strategic contention: the Court's statement can at least be taken to indicate that the preferences of the PRC and the ROC should be taken into account when deciding whether Taiwan should be viewed as a territorial unit of a Contracting State. Indeed, China could definitively settle the issue by declaring that the Convention should not extend to Taiwan. In this scenario, the Convention would not be applicable either because Taiwan does not form part of China in the first place, or, if it did, because China had made a reservation under Article 93 of the CISG. A statement by the Taiwanese authorities the Convention should apply to Taiwanese parties could also inform the discussion. As a result, one could understand the Court to mean that courts should apply the CISG as long as neither Taiwan nor China has expressed dissatisfaction with its being applicable. This, however, leaves the realm of legally relevant policy questions and ventures into political territory.Footnote 123 Declarations on the legal status of Taiwan, even if they pertain to the seemingly non-political field of international commercial law, necessarily follow a political logic and can never be severed from Taiwan's overall status and its relationship with the PRC.
D. The Need for a Uniform Solution under the CISG
The absence of compelling policy reasons to extend the CISG to Taiwan prompts the question of how the courts of Contracting States should approach the issue. Some domestic courts do defer to the position of their government when faced with matters of foreign policy and State recognition.Footnote 124 The decision in Mingtai Fire & Marine Insurance is a good example: the Court of Appeals expressly referred to the position of the US government on Taiwan, as set out in its amicus brief submitted to the court.Footnote 125 This level of deference to the executive branch may be a particular characteristic of the US legal system. In other jurisdictions, courts are likely to be more willing to assess the merits of Taiwan's status independently in their judicial reasoning,Footnote 126 without, of course, ignoring the position of their governments.Footnote 127 As a result, the different positions of national governments as well as different degrees of judicial deference may present a challenge for a uniform application of the Convention, as mandated by Article 7(1) of the CISG.
In the context of the CISG, it therefore seems desirable that courts do not simply defer to the position of their governments on the question of the status of Taiwan under international law but that they also take note of international case law and CISG scholarship on the issue in order to develop an internationally uniform solution. Particularly, courts of Contracting States should take account of solutions that could be acceptable at the international level, in order to prevent a fragmentation of case law with respect to Taiwan.Footnote 128 They should, however, not rely on the decision in Pulse Electronics, as its reasoning is unconvincing. First, the District Court fails to consider the implications of Taiwan's complicated status and misinterprets the position of the US government. Secondly, and more importantly, the District Court then focuses on Article 93 of the CISG, which does not answer the question of what constitutes a territory of a Contracting State. Apart from these deficiencies, the decision is also an outlier in its conclusion.Footnote 129 Other courts from various jurisdictions have held that the PRC's accession to various other treaties does not result in their being applicable to Taiwan.Footnote 130 In the interests of the internationally uniform application of the Convention, it therefore seems preferable to adopt the approach taken by most courts in the context of other uniform law treaties and to consider Taiwan not bound by the PRC's accession to the CISG. This is in line with those CISG decisions that consider Taiwanese parties as not having their place of business in a Contracting State.Footnote 131
V. CONCLUSION
The status of Taiwan in international law remains uncertain. The CISG is no exception in this regard: its provisions do not and cannot resolve one of the most enduring problems of the international legal order. This article has shown that this problem can be solved neither by the application of Article 93 of the CISG nor by resort to the policy goals underlying the Convention. Consequently, Pulse Electronics should not be relied upon as persuasive authority by other courts of Contracting States. Rather, the status of Taiwan under the CISG should be determined by public international law. In the context of the CISG as a uniform law convention, however, courts should not defer too quickly to their governments’ foreign policy positions but instead should act in accordance with courts of other Contracting States so as to develop an internationally uniform solution. Case law on other uniform law treaties may serve as a model or at least a reference point that can help to build an international consensus. The existing decisions in the context of other conventions seem to suggest that the most promising way of achieving such an international consensus is to consider Taiwan not bound by the Chinese approbation of the Convention. As the process of building an international consensus on this—if it is successful at all—will take time, parties remain well advised to address this uncertainty expressly by means of choice-of-law clauses.Footnote 132