TedX Orcas Island

Demandar a su fabricante chino por un producto de mala calidad

Our international litigation lawyers long ago developed template emails for responding to companies that write us about their China product quality problems. The below is the one we use for U.S. companies that write us with a China product quality problem and the contract provided us is not good at all. Most of the time

product liability

Demandar a empresas chinas por responsabilidad civil por productos defectuosos

In the last few years, my law firm’s international dispute resolution team (of which I am a part) has seen a tremendous increase in cases involving individuals and companies and lawyers wanting to sue Chinese companies for a Chinese manufactured product that injured someone. The cases coming to our law firm typically involve one of

Free Product from China

Cómo obtener productos GRATIS de China

Every day for the last week I have gotten at least one email from a foreign company that paid money to a company in China and got literally nothing in return. The term for this is theft. This sort of thing is a given by Chinese companies and for why this is so prevalent lately

china law blog

Arbitraje internacional de empresas extranjeras

Last fall, in U.S. Supreme Court to Rule on Important International Arbitration Issue, I wrote about an important international arbitration matter pending before the United States Supreme Court on whether foreign companies doing business in the United States can arbitrate a dispute with an American company. The specific issue was: Whether the New York Convention

Abogados especializados en fuerza mayor

Fuerza mayor en tiempos del coronavirus

Allá por los tiempos anteriores al coronavirus —el 30 de octubre de 2019—, en el artículo «No dejes que la fuerza mayor se convierta en una fuerza dominante en tu contrato con China», publicamos una entrada en la que advertíamos sobre las cláusulas de fuerza mayor en los contratos con empresas chinas. Esa entrada comenzaba con la siguiente advertencia a modo de broma: «Saca y echa un vistazo a tu contrato con tu socio chino...»

Illegal transshipping false claims act

Transbordo ilegal/País de origen falso: ayúdenos a ayudarle a enriquecerse

Earlier this year, “Univar USA Inc. paid  U.S. $62.5 Million to Resolve Allegations that it Evaded $36 Million in Antidumping Duties on Imported Chinese Saccharin.”  My law firm profited handsomely from this case because we brought it to the government’s attention and then assisted on it. The United States Department of Justice describes this case

Créditos documentarios internacionales

Los buenos contratos son fundamentales, maldita sea la corrupción.

Got an email the other day from a good-sized company the other day asking about the benefit of having manufacturing contracts with companies in countries like Thailand, Taiwan, Indonesia, and Malaysia. The email went something like this (I say “something” because I’ve changed it so nobody will ever be able to identify it): I am

China lawyers Korean lawyers

Tribunales de propiedad intelectual de China: resumen de los procedimientos

— Protecting Innovation in an Innovative Way: What are China’s IP Courts? After decades of engagement between US and Chinese legal experts on reforming IP protection in mainland China, Chinese IP courts were first pioneered in 2014 in Beijing, Shanghai, and Guangzhou (see the National People’s Congress (NPC) Decision of Establishing Intellectual Property Courts in

Robo de propiedad intelectual en China

Las acusaciones contra Huawei son la nueva normalidad

1. The Huawei Indictments On January 28, the U.S. Department of Justice unsealed two indictments against Huawei. The first indictment concerns ongoing claims against Huawei and its CFO, Meng Wanzhou, for allegedly violating U.S. sanctions against Iran. The second and more interesting indictment concerns alleged trade secret thefts by Huawei’s U.S. subsidiary under the direction

Abogados especializados en arbitraje internacional

Arbitraje en China

Chinese companies (especially SOEs) increasingly require their contracts with foreign companies provide for disputes to be resolved by arbitration in China. Our China lawyers are seeing mostly CIETAC and BAC arbitration clauses. Many of our American and European clients are uncomfortable with arbitrating against a Chinese company in China as they are convinced they cannot “get a fair

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