China Justice Observer

中司观察

EnglishArabicChinese (Simplified)DutchFrenchGermanHindiItalianJapaneseKoreanPortugueseRussianSpanishSwedishHebrewIndonesianVietnameseThaiTurkishMalay

First Tort Suit Under China’s Anti-Foreign Sanctions Law

Thu, 08 May 2025
Categories: China Legal Trends

On 19 Mar. 2025, during the 2025 National Two Sessions, China’s Supreme People’s Court’s (SPC) work report highlighted a landmark case—China’s first tort lawsuit under the PRC Anti-Foreign Sanctions Law. This case marks the first time that a Chinese court accepted the case under this law and facilitated a settlement, allowing a domestic company to recover over CNY 84 million in construction payments.

The case originated in September 2023, when a Chinese company contracted with a European company to build and install a water treatment module for a Floating Production Storage and Offloading (FPSO) vessel. The project was completed and delivered. However, in early 2024, the Chinese company was added to a third country’s Specially Designated Nationals (SDN) list. The European company then invoked sanctions to withhold payment and cut off communications.

Faced with unfavorable overseas arbitration clauses, the Chinese company invoked the PRC Anti-Foreign Sanction Law as a legal basis for relief and filed a lawsuit in China. On 18 Sept. 2024, the court approved an application of maritime preservation. The case was formally accepted on October 11 and resolved through mediation within 39 days, ensuring full payment.

 

 

Photo by Road Trip with Raj on Unsplash

Contributors: CJO Staff Contributors Team

Save as PDF

You might also like

China Enacts Landmark Private Economy Promotion Law

China enacted its landmark first Private Economy Promotion Law, effective May 20, 2025, to guarantee fair competition, streamline market access via a unified negative list, and bolster private enterprises through financing, innovation, and service support.

China Strengthens Criminal IP Protection with New Rules

In April 2025, China’s top court and procuratorate jointly issued a new judicial interpretation to clarify standards for handling criminal intellectual property infringement cases, aiming to strengthen IP protection, particularly in the service sector.

SPC’s 2024 Typical IP Cases Include AI Face-Swap Ruling

In April 2025, China’s Supreme People’s Court released eight typical IP cases, highlighting judicial responses to emerging issues in AI, gaming, and biotech, including a landmark ruling on AI face-swapping copyright infringement.

China Eases Tax Refunds to Boost Inbound Tourist Spending

In 2025, China has lowered its departure tax refund threshold from 500 RMB to 200 RMB and doubled cash refund limits to 20,000 RMB while expanding eligible stores and streamlining processes, aiming to boost inbound tourism spending and promote Chinese products.

Chinese Courts Bolster Pregnant Workers' Rights Protection

In April 2025, China's Ministry of Human Resources and Supreme People's Court released typical labor dispute cases emphasizing stronger protection of pregnant employees' rights, including a case where unlawful job reassignment and salary reduction were ruled illegal.