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World Court Digest



III. The International Court of Justice
2. THE JURISDICTION OF THE INTERNATIONAL COURT OF JUSTICE
2.1. General Rules

¤ Maritime Delimitation and Territorial
Questions between Qatar and Bahrain,
Jurisdiction and Admissibility,
Judgment, I.C.J. Reports 1995, p. 6

[pp. 23-24] 43. The Court has still to examine one other argument put forward by Bahrain to contest its jurisdiction in this case. According to Bahrain even if the Doha Minutes were to be interpreted as not ruling out unilateral seisin, that would still not authorize one of the Parties to seise the Court by way of an Application. Bahrain argues, in effect, that seisin is not merely a procedural matter but a question of jurisdiction; that consent to unilateral seisin is subject to the same conditions as consent to judicial settlement and must therefore be unequivocal and indisputable; and that, where the texts are silent, joint seisin must by default be the only solution. Qatar, for its part, distinguishes between seisin and jurisdiction and explains that, while the wishes of the Parties, as expressed in the agreements in force, are of decisive importance for the purpose of establishing jurisdiction, the validity of the seisin must on the other hand be evaluated essentially from the standpoint of the Statute and the Rules of Court, subject to any special provision to which the Parties may have agreed.
The Court does not consider it necessary to dwell at length on the links which exist between jurisdiction and seisin. It is true that, as an act instituting proceedings, seisin is a procedural step independent of the basis of jurisdiction invoked and, as such, is governed by the Statute and the Rules of Court. However, the Court is unable to entertain a case so long as the relevant basis of jurisdiction has not been supplemented by the necessary act of seisin: from this point of view, the question of whether the Court was validly seised appears to be a question of jurisdiction. There is no doubt that the Court's jurisdiction can only be established on the basis of the will of the Parties, as evidenced by the relevant texts. But in interpreting the text of the Doha Minutes, the Court has reached the conclusion that it allows a unilateral seisin. Once the Court has been validly seised, both Parties are bound by the procedural consequences which the Statute and the Rules make applicable to the method of seisin employed. It is therefore not necessary to examine Bahrain's arguments based on the discretionary nature of the choice of a method of seisin or the drawbacks for Bahrain of being placed in the position of respondent.

[pp. 60-61 D.O. Shahabuddeen] It is necessary to bear in mind the distinction between jurisdiction and seisin. The use of the correct method of seisin is a condition-precedent to the exercise of jurisdiction. If seisin is not properly effected in a case that is sought to be brought, the agreed jurisdiction becomes unavailable to the Court, with the result that, in that particular case, the Court has no jurisdiction (see Aegean Sea Continental Shelf Judgment, I.C.J. Reports 1978, p. 45, para. 109; and Application for Revision and Interpretation of the Judgment of 24 February 1982 in the Case concerning the Continental Shelf (Tunisia/Libyan Arab Jamahiriya) (Tunisia v. Libyan Arab Jamahiriya), Judgment, I.C.J. Reports 1985, p. 216, para. 43). But, despite this functional link between the concepts, it remains true that seisin is not jurisdiction. Thus, consent to jurisdiction does not by itself include consent to seisin being effected by any particular method.
This is so even in a case in which, the agreement to litigate being silent on seisin, the parties proceed to effect seisin jointly; in such a case, they are acting not pursuant to any right to act jointly which has been conferred by the giving of consent to jurisdiction (such a right is scarcely needed), but in exercise of their normal freedom to act as they both see fit. This freedom is exercised through the consensual act by which the case is jointly submitted; the mutual consents involved are distinct from consent to jurisdiction. A right of unilateral application likewise depends on consent other than consent to jurisdiction, even if, as is likely, consent is in both respects given in the same instrument.