Jurisdiction of Courts and Enforcement of Judgments Act, 1998.

PART II

The 1968 Convention and the Accession Conventions

Interpretation of this Part.

4.—(1) In this Part, unless the context otherwise requires—

“Contracting State” means a state—

(a) which is—

(i) one of the original parties to the 1968 Convention (Belgium, the Federal Republic of Germany, France, Italy, Luxembourg and the Netherlands), or

(ii) one of the parties acceding to the 1968 Convention under any of the Accession Conventions (the State, Denmark, the United Kingdom, the Hellenic Republic, the Kingdom of Spain, the Portuguese Republic, the Republic of Austria, the Republic of Finland and the Kingdom of Sweden), and

(b) respecting which—

(i) the 1978 Accession Convention has entered into force in accordance with Article 39 of that Convention,

(ii) the 1982 Accession Convention has entered into force in accordance with Article 15 of that Convention,

(iii) the 1989 Accession Convention has entered into force in accordance with Article 32 of that Convention, or

(iv) the 1996 Accession Convention has entered into force in accordance with Article 16 of that Convention,

as the case may be;

“the Conventions” means the 1968 Convention, the 1971 Protocol and the Accession Conventions;

“enforceable maintenance order” means—

(a) a maintenance order respecting all of which an enforcement order has been made, or

(b) if an enforcement order has been made respecting only part of a maintenance order, the maintenance order to the extent to which it is so ordered to be enforced;

“enforcement order” means an order for the recognition or enforcement of all or part of a judgment where the order—

(a) is made by the Master of the High Court under section 7 , or

(b) is made or varied on appeal from a decision of the Master of the High Court under section 7 or from a decision of the High Court relating to the Master’s decision;

“judgment” means a judgment or order (by whatever name called) that is a judgment for the purposes of the 1968 Convention, and, except in sections 10 , 12 and 14 , includes—

(a) an instrument or settlement referred to in Title IV of the 1968 Convention, and

(b) an arrangement relating to maintenance obligations concluded with or authenticated by an administrative authority, as referred to in Article 10 of the 1996 Accession Convention;

“maintenance” means maintenance within the meaning of the Conventions;

“maintenance creditor” means, in relation to a maintenance order, the person entitled to the payments for which the order provides;

“maintenance debtor” means, in relation to a maintenance order, the person liable to make payments under the order;

“maintenance order” means a judgment relating to maintenance.

(2) The Minister for Foreign Affairs may, by order, declare—

(a) that any state specified in the order is a Contracting State, or

(b) that a declaration has been made pursuant to Article IV of the 1968 Convention, or a communication has been made pursuant to Article VI of that Convention, to the Secretary General of the Council of the European Communities.

(3) The text of a declaration or communication referred to in subsection (2)(b) shall be set out in the order declaring that the declaration or communication has been made.

(4) An order that is in force under subsection (2) is—

(a) if made under subsection (2)(a), evidence that any state to which the declaration relates is a Contracting State, and

(b) if made under subsection (2)(b), evidence that the declaration pursuant to Article IV or the communication pursuant to Article VI was made and evidence of its contents.

(5) The Minister for Foreign Affairs may, by order, amend or revoke an order made under subsection (2) or this subsection.