Part 1 General Provisions |
Title 1 Subject Matter and Scope of Application |
Title 2 Jurisdiction of the Courts and Recusal |
Chapter 1 Material Jurisdiction and Functional Jurisdiction |
Art. 5 Court of sole cantonal instance
1 The cantonal law designates the court that has jurisdiction as sole cantonal instance for:
2 This court is also competent to order interim measures before an action is pending. 5 Amended by Annex 2 No 1, in force since 1 Jan. 2022 (AS 2010 1739; BBl 2006 7221; AS 2022 43; BBl 2007 5397). 7 Amended by Annex No 3 of the FA of 19 June 2020 (Company Law), in force since 1 Jan. 2023 (AS 2020 4005; 2022 109; BBl 2017 399). 9 Amended by Annex No II 4 of the Financial Institutes Act of 15 June 2018, in force since 1 Jan. 2020 (AS 2018 5247, 2019 4631; BBl 20158901). 13 Inserted by Annex 3 No II 3 of the Coat of Arms Protection Act of 21 June 2013, in force since 1 Jan. 2017 (AS 2015 3679; BBl 2009 8533). |
Art. 6 Commercial Court
1 The cantons may designate a special court that has jurisdiction as sole cantonal instance for commercial disputes (Commercial Court). 2 A dispute is considered commercial, if:
3 If only the defendant is registered in the Swiss Commercial Register or in an equivalent foreign register, but all the other conditions are met, the plaintiff may choose between the Commercial Court and the ordinary court. 4 The cantons may also assign to the Commercial Court:
5 The Commercial Court is also competent to order interim measures before an action is pending. |
Chapter 2 Territorial Jurisdiction |
Section 1 General Provisions |
Art. 10 Domicile and registered office
1 Unless this Code provides otherwise, the following court has jurisdiction:
2 Domicile is determined in accordance with the Civil Code (CC)18. Article 24 CC does not apply. |
Art. 11 Residence
1 If the defendant has no domicile, the court at his or her habitual residence has jurisdiction. 2 A habitual residence is the place where a person lives for a certain period of time, even if that period is limited from the outset. 3 If the defendant has no habitual residence, the court at his or her last known place of residence has jurisdiction. |
Art. 15 Joinder of parties and joinder of actions
1 If an action is directed against two or more defendants, the court that has jurisdiction with regard to one defendant has jurisdiction with regard to all defendants unless jurisdiction is based solely on an agreement on jurisdiction. 2 If two or more actions that are factual connected are raised against one and the same defendant, each court that has jurisdiction over any one of the actions has jurisdiction over all of them. |
Art. 17 Agreement on jurisdiction
1 Unless the law provides otherwise, the parties may agree on which court has jurisdiction over an existing or future dispute arising from a particular legal relationship. Unless the agreement provides otherwise, the action may only be brought before agreed court. 2 The agreement must be in writing or in any other form allowing it to be evidenced by text. |
Section 2 Law of Persons |
Art. 20 Protection of personal privacy and data protection
The court at the domicile or registered office of either of the parties has jurisdiction to decide on:
19 Amended by Annex 1 No II 24 of the Data Protection Act of 25 Sept. 2020, in force since 1 Sept. 2023 (AS 2022 491; BBl 2017 6941). |
Section 6 Actions in Contract |
Art. 32 Consumer contracts
1 The following court has jurisdiction in disputes concerning consumer contracts:
2 Consumer contracts are contracts on supplies for ordinary consumption intended for the personal use of the consumer or his family and offered by the other party in the course of its professional or commercial activity. |
Art. 34 Employment Law
1 The court at the domicile or registered office of the defendant or where the employee normally carries out his or her work has jurisdiction to decide actions relating to employment law. 2 If a job applicant or an employee brings an action based on the Recruitment Act of 6 October 198922, the court at the place of the business establishment of the recruitment or hiring agent with whom the contract was concluded also has jurisdiction. |
Art. 35 Waiver of statutory jurisdiction
1 The following persons may not waive the jurisdiction provided for in Articles 32 to 34, whether in by advance agreement or by entering appearance:
2 The conclusion of an agreement on jurisdiction after the emergence of the dispute is reserved. |
Section 7 Actions in Tort |
Art. 38 Motor vehicle and bicycle accidents
1 The court at the domicile or registered office of the defendant or at the place of the accident has jurisdiction to decide actions resulting from motor vehicle and bicycle accidents. 2 Actions against the Swiss National Bureau of Insurance (Art. 74 of the Road Traffic Act of 19 December 195823; RTA) or against the Swiss National Guarantee Fund (Art. 76 RTA) may also be brought before the court at the place of any branch of such institutions. Art. 38a24 Nuclear damage 1 In the case of actions arising from nuclear incidents, the court in the canton where the incident took place has mandatory jurisdiction. 2 If there is any uncertainty as to which canton this is, the court in the canton where the nuclear installation of the liable proprietor is located has mandatory jurisdiction. 3 If two or more courts have jurisdiction in accordance with these rules, the court in the canton that is most closely linked to the incident and which is most seriously affected by it has mandatory jurisdiction. 24 Inserted by Annex 2 No 1, in force since 1 Jan. 2022 (AS 2010 1739; BBl 2006 7221; AS 2022 43; BBl 2007 5397). |
Section 8 Commercial Law |
Art. 40 Company law and the commercial register 25
1 The court at the domicile or registered office of the defendant or the court at the registered office of the company has jurisdiction to decide actions concerning liability in company law. 2 The court at the last registered office of the deleted legal entity has mandatory jurisdiction over the reinstatement of a deleted legal entity in the commercial register.26 25 Amended by Annex No 2 of the FA of 17 March 2017 (Commercial Register Law), in force since 1 Jan. 2021 (AS 2020 957; BBl 2015 3617). 26 Inserted by Annex No 2 of the FA of 17 March 2017 (Commercial Register Law), in force since 1 Jan. 2021 (AS 2020 957; BBl 2015 3617). |
Art. 4127
27 Repealed by No II 1 of the FA of 28 Sept. 2012, with effect from 1 May 2013 (AS 2013 1103; BBl 2011 6875). |
Art. 42 Mergers, demergers, transformations, transfers of assets and liabilities
The court at the registered office of one of the involved entities has jurisdiction to decide actions relating to the Mergers Act of 3 October 200328. |
Art. 43 Cancellation of securities and insurance policies, injunction against payment
1 The court at the registered office of the company has mandatory jurisdiction to declare the cancellation of shares. 2 The court at the place where the immovable property is recorded in the land register has mandatory jurisdiction to declare the cancellation of mortgage instruments. 3 The court at the domicile or registered office of the debtor has mandatory jurisdiction to declare the cancellation of other securities and insurance policies. 4 The court at the place of payment has mandatory jurisdiction to issue injunctions against payment under a bill of exchange or cheque and to declare their cancellation. |
Section 9 Debt Enforcement and Bankruptcy Law |
Chapter 3 Recusal |
Art. 47 Grounds for recusal
1 Judges and judicial officers shall recuse themselves if:
2 Involvement in the following, in particular, is in itself no reason for recusal:
|
Art. 49 Application for recusal
1 A party that wishes to challenge a judge or judicial officer must file the corresponding application as soon as it has become aware of the reason for recusal. It must show credibly the facts that justify the challenge. 2 The judge or judicial officer concerned shall respond to the application. |
Art. 51 Consequences of violating the regulations on recusal
1 Procedural acts in which a person obliged to recuse him- or herself has participated must be annulled and repeated if a party so requests within 10 days of becoming aware of the reason for recusal. 2 If the taking of evidence cannot be repeated, the relevant evidence may be taken into consideration by the deciding court. 3 If a reason for recusal is detected only after the close of the proceedings, the provisions on review apply. |
Title 3 Procedural Principles and Procedural Requirements |
Title 4 Pendency and Effects of Withdrawal of the Action |
Art. 63 Pendency where the court has no jurisdiction or the procedure is incorrect
1 If a submission that has been withdrawn or rejected due to lack of jurisdiction is filed again with the competent conciliation authority or court within one month of withdrawal or the declaration of non-admissibility, the date of the first filing is deemed to be the date of pendency. 2 The same applies if the claim was not filed under the proper procedure. 3 The special statutory deadlines for filing actions under the DEBA32 are reserved. |
Art. 64 Effects of pendency
1 The pendency of an action has in particular the following effects:
2 When compliance with statutory deadline under private law depends on the date of the statement of claim, of raising an action or of another act initiating legal proceedings, the relevant moment is that of pendency in accordance with this Code. |
Art. 65 Effects of withdrawal
Any person who withdraws an action before the competent court may not bring proceedings again against the same party on the same subject matter if the court has already served the statement of claim on the defendant and the defendant does not consent to its withdrawal. |
Title 5 Parties and Participation of Third Parties |
Chapter 2 Representation of the Parties |
Art. 68 Representation by agreement
1 Any person who has capacity to take legal action may choose to be represented in proceedings. 2 The following persons are allowed to act as professional representatives:
3 The representative must prove his or her authority by power of attorney. 4 The court may order the personal appearance of a represented party. |
Art. 69 Inability to appear
1 If a party is manifestly unable to appear, the court may invite that party to appoint a representative. If the party does not comply within the set deadline, a representative shall be appointed by the court. 2 The court shall notify the Adult and Child Protection Authority if protective measures are deemed necessary.35 35 Amended by Annex 2 No 3 of the FA of 19 Dec. 2008, in force since 1 Jan. 2013 (AS 2010 1739, 2011 725; BBl 2006 72217001). |
Chapter 4 Third Party Intervention |
Chapter 5 Third Party Notice and Third Party Action |
Title 8 Costs and Legal Aid |
Chapter 1 Procedural Costs |
Art. 95 Definitions
1 The procedural costs include:
2 The court costs include:
3 The party costs include:
|
Art. 99 Security for party costs
1 At the request of the defendant, the plaintiff must provide security for party costs:
2 In the case of mandatory joinder, security must be provided only if each party fulfils one of the above mentioned conditions. 3 No security need be provided:
36 Inserted by Annex 1 No II 24 of the Data Protection Act of 25 Sept. 2020, in force since 1 Sept. 2023 (AS 2022 491; BBl 2017 6941). |
Art. 100 Nature and amount of security
1 Security may be provided in cash or in the form of a guarantee from a bank with a branch in Switzerland or from an insurance company authorised to operate in Switzerland. 2 The court may subsequently order the increase, reduction or return of the security. |
Art. 101 Provision of advance and security
1 The court sets a deadline for the provision of the advance and the security. 2 It may order interim measures before the security is provided. 3 If the advance or security is not provided even within a period of grace, the action or application shall be declared inadmissible. |
Art. 102 Advance for taking of evidence
1 Each party shall advance the costs for taking the evidence that he or she requires. 2 If the parties offer the same evidence, each party shall advance half of the costs. 3 If one party fails to pay an advance, the other party may do so, failing which the evidence shall not be taken. Matters in which the court must establish the facts ex officio are reserved. |
Chapter 2 Allocation and Settlement of Procedural Costs |
Art. 104 Decision on costs
1 As a general rule, the court decides on the procedural costs in the final decision. 2 Where an interim decision is made (Art. 237), the procedural costs incurred up to that point may be allocated. 3 The decision on the procedural costs for interim measures may be deferred until the final decision on the merits. 4 If a case is referred back to a lower court, the higher court may leave it to the lower court to allocate the costs of the appellate proceedings. |
Art. 106 General principles of allocation
1 The costs are charged to the unsuccessful party. If an action is not admitted by the court or if it is withdrawn, the plaintiff is deemed to be the unsuccessful party; in case of acceptance of the claim it is the defendant. 2 If no party entirely is successful, the costs are allocated in accordance with the outcome of the case. 3 If three or more persons are participating in the proceedings as principal parties or accessory parties, the court shall determine each party's share of the costs. It may hold the parties jointly and severally liable. |
Art. 107 Discretionary allocation
1 The court may diverge from the general principles of allocation and allocate the costs at its own discretion:
2 Court costs that are not attributable to any party or third party may be charged to the canton if equitable. 38 Inserted by Annex No 2 of the FA of 17 March 2017 (Commercial Register Law), in force since 1 Jan. 2021 (AS 2020 957; BBl 2015 3617). |
Art. 109 Allocation in the event of a settlement
1 If a case is settled in court, the costs are charged to the parties according to the terms of the settlement. 2 The costs are allocated according to Articles 106–108:
|
Art. 111 Recovery of costs
1 The court costs are set off against the advances paid by the parties. The balance is collected from the person liable to pay. 2 The party liable to pay shall reimburse the other party his or her advances and shall pay the other party the party costs awarded. 3 The provisions on legal aid are reserved. |
Chapter 3 Special Provisions on Costs |
Art. 113 Conciliation proceedings
1 No party costs are awarded in conciliation proceedings. Payment by the canton of legal agents under the legal aid system is reserved. 2 No court costs are charged in disputes:
44 Inserted by Annex 1 No II 24 of the Data Protection Act of 25 Sept. 2020, in force since 1 Sept. 2023 (AS 2022 491; BBl 2017 6941). |
Art. 114 Litigation proceedings
In litigation proceedings, no court costs are charged in disputes:
51 Inserted by No I 2 of the FA of 14 Dec. 2018 on Improving the Protection of Persons Affected by Violence, in force since 1 July 2020 (AS 2019 2273; BBl 2017 7307). 53 Inserted by Annex 1 No II 24 of the Data Protection Act of 25 Sept. 2020, in force since 1 Sept. 2023 (AS 2022 491; BBl 2017 6941). |
Art. 115 Obligation to bear costs
1 Court costs may also be charged in cost-free proceedings to a party who proceeds in a vexatious manner or in bad faith. 2 In the case of litigation relating to Article 114 letter f, court costs may also be charged to the unsuccessful party if an injunction pursuant to Article 28bCC55or electronic monitoring pursuant to Article 28cCC is ordered against them.56 56 Inserted by No I 2 of the FA of 14 Dec. 2018 on Improving the Protection of Persons Affected by Violence, in force since 1 July 2020 (AS 2019 2273; BBl 2017 7307). |
Title 9 Director of Proceedings, Procedural Acts and Deadlines |
Chapter 2 Forms of Procedural Acts |
Section 1 Language of the Proceedings |
Section 2 Party Submissions |
Art. 130 Form 57
1 Submissions must be filed with the court in the form of paper documents or electronically. They must be signed. 2 In the case of electronic submission, the submission and its enclosures must bear a qualified electronic signature in accordance with the Federal Act of 18 March 201658 on Electronic Signatures. The Federal Council shall regulate:
57 Amended by Annex No II 5 of the FA of 18 March 2016 on Electronic Signatures, in force since 1 Jan. 2017 (AS 2016 4651; BBl 2014 1001). |
Art. 132 Defective, querulous and abusive submissions
1 The court shall set a deadline for rectifying formal defects such as a missing signature or missing power of attorney. In the event of default, the submission is not taken into consideration. 2 The same applies to submissions that are illegible, improper, incomprehensible or incoherent. 3 Querulous or abusive submissions are returned to the sender without further formalities. |
Section 4 Service of Process |
Art. 138 Form
1 The summons, rulings and decisions are served by registered mail or by other means against confirmation of receipt. 2 Service is accomplished when the document has been received by the addressee or one of his or her employees or a person of at least 16 years of age living in the same household, unless the court instructs that a document must be served personally on the addressee. 3 Service is also deemed to have been effected:
4 Other documents may be served by regular mail. |
Art. 139 Electronic service 59
1 With the consent of the person concerned, summonses, rulings and decisions may be served electronically. They must bear an electronic signature in accordance with the Federal Act of 18 March 201660 on Electronic Signatures. 2 The Federal Council regulates:
59 Amended by Annex No II 5 of the FA of 18 March 2016 on Electronic Signatures, in force since 1 Jan. 2017 (AS 2016 4651; BBl 2014 1001). |
Art. 141 Public notice
1 Service shall be effected by notice in the official gazette of the canton or in the Swiss Official Gazette of Commerce where:
2 Service is deemed accomplished on the day of publication. |
Chapter 3 Limitation Periods, Default and Restitution |
Section 1 Limitation Periods |
Art. 142 Computation
1 Limitation periods triggered by a communication or the occurrence of an event starting on the following day. 2 If a limitation period is measured in months, it expires on the same date of the last month as the date of the month in which the period started to run. In the absence of such a date, the period expires on the last day of the month. 3 If the last day of a limitation period is a Saturday, a Sunday or a public holiday recognised by federal or cantonal law at the location of the court, the period expires on the following working day. |
Art. 143 Compliance
1 Submissions must be filed no later than the last day of the limitation period, either by filing with the court or by handing over to Swiss Post or a diplomatic mission or consular office of Switzerland for forwarding on to the court. 2 In case of electronic submission, the relevant time for compliance with a deadline is that at which the receipt is issued that confirms that all the steps have been completed that the party must carry out for transmission.61 3 Payment to the court is made within the deadline if the funds are handed over to Swiss Post in favour of the court or debited from a postal or bank account in Switzerland no later than on the last day of the limitation period. 61 Amended by Annex No II 5 of the FA of 18 March 2016 on Electronic Signatures, in force since 1 Jan. 2017 (AS 2016 4651; BBl 2014 1001). |
Art. 145 Suspension of limitation periods
1 Statutory limitation periods or periods set by the court shall be suspended:
2 The suspension does not apply:
3 Parties must be made aware of the exceptions provided in paragraph 2 above. 4 The provisions of the DEBA62 on debt enforcement holidays and suspension are reserved. |
Title 10 Evidence |