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Execution of Foreign Judgments in Greece

The Greek Code of Civil Procedure determines the procedure and the preconditions, in order for a foreign judgement to be enforced in Greece. This procedure is important for two reasons:

  1. To be determined that the requirements set by law are met, in order to
  2. issue a judgment directing the relevant Greek authorities to execute the foreign title.

An agreement of the interested parties, allowing for them to proceed with execution without having the title declared executable by a judgment, is invalid, even when the lawful requirements are met. Therefore, the applicable Greek Laws, regarding the process to be followed, are mandatory. The requirements and conditions set by the Greek laws, in order for a foreign title be declared as enforceable in Greece include the following:

  1. The existence of a foreign title (i.e. a title issued in the name of a foreign State): this can be a Court judgment as well as any other document, provided it is considered lawful and valid according to the laws of the foreign State (that is, that it was issued by an Authority or person that had the power to act so). Examples of documents that cannot be declared executable in Greece are: checks (because they do not constitute a document issued in the name of a foreign state), private agreements or compromises (because they are not titles) or titles that mandate an act or omission that cannot be forced, such as an act of marriage. The title must be executable where it was issued: it is irrelevant whether the title is also deemed executable in Greece. The title must still be executable at the time that the request for the declaration of its execution in Greece is filed (therefore, if the foreign title was originally executable but seized to be so at the time that the Greek Courts examine the relevant petition, the title cannot be declared executable in Greece).
  2. The contents of the foreign title must not oppose the Greek public order.
  3. The foreign title must not offend the morality and customs of the Greek society.
  4. The lack of existence of a treaty in force between Greece and the foreign State, providing differently.

If the foreign title is a Court judgment, the following additional conditions must also be met:

  1. That the judgment is considered a Court judgment by the foreign State that remains in force (in other words that the lawful conditions have been met and that it has been issued in accordance to the foreign laws)
  2. That the judgment regulates a private matter
  3. That the judgment is deemed executable based on the laws of the foreign State, where it was issued.
  4. That the issuing Court had jurisdiction.
  5. That the losing party was not deprived of his or her right to participate in the trial and defend himself or herself.
  6. That the foreign judgment does not oppose the judgment of a Greek Court issued between the same parties on the same matter.

June 2020