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in the keywords:  concept of contractual relation in the Polish Supreme Court jurisprudence
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EN
Under Polish law, indebted companies can be liquidated without satisfying all the creditors. Therefore, debts may remain without a debtor. This issue is controversial in the Polish judicature. One way of thinking considers debt to be so closely joined with the debtor that when the debtor’s existence ends with no successor, the debts also end their existence. The other opinion holds that debts of the liquidated company do not cease to exist and may be claimed from the guarantor. As a rule, in Polish law debt is not strictly connected to the debtor or creditor and a change of debtor or creditor is possible. An old Ius Commune rule nomina ossibus inhaerent is not recognized in Poland. Thus the opinion that debts do not vanish after the liquidation of a company is more correct from the dogmatic point of view. Such a stance is also supported by a recent change in the Law on National Court Register.
EN
The article is devoted to national court powers in cases for damages for the claim security in Regulation (EU) No 1215/2012. The paper presents basic information about general provisions and special jurisdiction. The study is focused on damages for the claim security in the Polish civil procedure and the essentially legal meaning of tort, delict or quasi-delict in European civil law. An interpretation of the aforementioned subjects in the jurisdiction of Polish courts and the Court of Justice is presented. The author tries to answer the question of whether a person domiciled in one Member State may be sued in another Member State as regards as a civil claim for damages for the claim security awarded and carried out in another Member State.
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