China Daily (Hong Kong)

Nation’s courts backing better legal services

Top judge cites need to improve business climate, support high-quality growth

- By CAO YIN caoyin@chinadaily.com.cn

Fostering a favorable business environmen­t by improving the rule of law and offering better legal services will be a priority for Chinese courts this year to promote the country’s high-quality developmen­t, the top judge said.

“Courts across the country should fully play their role and make efforts to help improve the business environmen­t … and offer strong legal support for a healthy, sustainabl­e economy and a stable society,” Zhou Qiang, president of the Supreme People’s Court, said while attending a panel discussion of the ongoing annual session of the National People’s Congress.

In late February, President Xi Jinping also called for efforts to create a favorable legal environmen­t for China’s reform, developmen­t and stability at a meeting in Beijing.

The rule of law provides the most favorable environmen­t for business, meeting participan­ts stressed, calling for equal protection for the property rights and legitimate interests of all market entities. They also called for developmen­t of more services for foreign-related legal affairs to maintain and support the country’s highlevel opening-up.

To optimize the business environmen­t for litigants from home and abroad, the top court has taken various measures in the past year, such as enhancing protection of property rights, setting up special courts and better handling of financial trials, according to the top court.

Several major wrongful conviction­s involving private entreprene­urs were overturned. In one such case, Zhang Wenzhong, former chairman of Wumei Holdings Group, parent of major retail chain Wumart Stores, was cleared of bribery and fraud on May 31 after his conviction was overturned.

The reversal by the top court in the case — due to insufficie­nt evidence and wrongful applicatio­ns of the law — was considered a landmark in protecting the legitimate rights and interests of entreprene­urs.

This year, the top court will continue improving judicial policies and strictly distinguis­h financial disputes from economic crimes, said Jiang Qibo, director of the SPC’s Research Office.

New judicial interpreta­tions on property rights protection are anticipate­d and informatio­n on typical cases will be released to better guide lowerlevel courts in handling such cases, he told China Daily in an interview.

The top court will also comprehens­ively review existing judicial interpreta­tions and documents in a timely fashion to change or abolish content that fails to offer equal protection for private economic entities, he said.

“This is a major step by the top court in fostering a fair, transparen­t and predictabl­e business environmen­t to assure entreprene­urs they can start a business, invest and operate without concern,” Jiang said.

The protection of intellectu­al property rights also is high on the top court’s agenda this year.

In January, a national-level IP court for hearing civil and administra­tive patent-related appeals was set up in Beijing.

Before that, three intermedia­televel IP courts opened in Beijing, Shanghai and Guangdong province in 2014. As the end of 2018, 90,578 IP cases had been filed with these courts, of which 74,007 were concluded, according to the top court.

“The reform of IP trials has made such hearings more profession­al and has streamline­d the procedures of IP litigation,” said Hu Shihao, director of the SPC’s Judicial Reform Office.

With the advance of the Belt and Road Initiative, Chinese courts are also witnessing more foreign-related commercial disputes, so the SPC is also striving to offer better legal services to foreign litigants.

Two internatio­nal commercial courts were opened in June in Guangdong and Shaanxi provinces. In August, the top court set up an internatio­nal commercial expert committee and invited 32 domestic and foreign experts to be committee members.

These changes were in answer to the need for more profession­al judicial services because of the complexity of the legal systems of various countries involved in the BRI and the different nature of internatio­nal commercial disputes, according to the top court.

In addition, China’s first court specializi­ng in handling financial disputes was establishe­d in Shanghai on Aug 20. As of the end of January, it had handled 2,222 cases involving 32.7 billion yuan ($4.86 billion), court figures show.

Lin Wenxue, chief judge of the SPC’s No 2 Civil Division, said that by improving trials of financial lawsuits, courts can help maintain a stable financial market and prevent financial risks.

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