Lawyer justice symbol removebg preview 1

.

 

OHADA ENFORCEMENT GUIDE FOR SIFoCC

 

Corrected & Updated 2026 Edition

 

By Justice Dr Theophilus Tayi Tatsi

 

CAMEROON

 

 COMPREHENSIVE INTRODUCTION

The Standing International Forum of Commercial Courts (SIFoCC) is preparing a Multilateral Memorandum on the Enforcement of Commercial Judgments for Money (MME). Its purpose is to provide a clear, comparative map of how jurisdictions recognise and enforce foreign monetary judgments, arbitral awards, and mediated settlements.

Africa’s OHADA zone—seventeen States that have transferred commercial‑law sovereignty to a supranational system—offers a uniquely harmonised enforcement ecosystem. The Member States are: Benin, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, Comoros, Côte d’Ivoire, Democratic Republic of Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon, Guinea, Guinea‑Bissau, Mali, Niger, Republic of the Congo, Senegal, and Togo.

 

Three Uniform Acts govern the enforcement of monetary obligations:

  • Uniform Act on Arbitration (UAA) 2017
  • Uniform Act on Mediation (UAM) 2017
  • Uniform Act Organising Simplified Recovery Procedures and Enforcement Measures (AUPSRVE) 2023

This Guide provides a verified, step-by-step enforcement pipeline, best‑practice templates, and a 2026–2028 roadmap.

 

  1. COMMON PROCEDURAL PRACTICES — THE OHADA PIPELINE

1.1 Intra‑OHADA Court Judgments

OHADA has no uniform judgment‑recognition convention.
Recognition of foreign court judgments—whether OHADA or non‑OHADA—is governed by national private international law.

 

Table 1 — Intra‑OHADA Judgment Recognition

Stage Actor Test / Documents Time‑Limit Appeal
Request Creditor Exequatur petition + certified judgment + finality + service + translation Day 0
Judicial Examination Judge Jurisdiction, finality, service, public policy, reciprocity No statutory deadline Yes
Exequatur Granted Judge Order stamped “exequatur” Varies Yes
Enforcement Bailiff AUPSRVE 2023 measures Immediate Limited

 

1.2 Arbitral Awards (UAA 2017)

  • 15-day deemed-granted rule applies to arbitral awards.
  • Silence of the court after 15 days = exequatur presumed granted.
  • No review of the merits.
  • Refusal appealable only to the CCJA.
  • Awards have a res judicata effect upon rendering.

1.3 Foreign (Non‑OHADA) Court Judgments

Recognition follows national law using a convergent five-filter test:

  1. Finality
  2. International jurisdiction
  3. Due process
  4. International public policy
  5. Reciprocity (some States)

1.4 Mediated Settlements (UAM 2017)

  • The court must issue its ruling within 7 working days.
  • If no ruling within 15 days, approval is automatically presumed.
  • Notarial engrossment is an alternative route to enforceability.

 

  1. OHADA MODULES FOR THE MME

Table 2 — MME‑Ready OHADA Modules

MME Section OHADA Contribution
Green‑lane timetable 15-day deemed-granted rule for arbitral awards
Document checklist Uniform bundle for arbitration, mediation, judgments
Public‑policy test Narrow international public policy
Execution toolbox AUPSRVE 2023: freeze, garnish, sell, electronic service
Reciprocity table Applies only to foreign court judgments
Digital pilot Côte d’Ivoire, Sénégal, Cameroun

 

  1. MONETARY AWARDS OUTSIDE BILATERAL TREATIES

Foreign arbitral awards: uniform enforcement under UAA + NYC.
Foreign court judgments: national law; reciprocity varies.

Jurisdictional Notes

  • Cameroon: Bijural; strong digitalisation.
  • Equatorial Guinea: Spanish translation; notarization.
  • Gabon: Commercial orientation; narrow public policy.
  • Chad: Video hearings; logistical constraints.

 

 JUDICIAL MAPPING — STRUCTURAL INDICATORS

Table 3 — Structural Capacity Across OHADA States

Tier States Indicators Digital Tools Constraints
High Cameroon, Côte d’Ivoire, Sénégal, Togo Strong commercial courts Yes Minimal
Moderate Benin, Burkina Faso, Gabon, Guinea, Mali, Niger Functional chambers Partial Translators
Challenged CAR, Chad, Comoros, DRC, Congo Security/logistics No Infrastructure
Language Outliers Equatorial Guinea, Guinea‑Bissau, Comoros Translation needs No Interpreter shortages

 BEST PRACTICES & STANDARDISATION TOOLS

 

5.1 One-Page Document Checklist

  • Certified copy
  • Finality certificate
  • Service proof
  • Translation
  • Reciprocity memo (judgments only)
  • Draft exequatur order

5.2 Mediation Homologation Template

  • 7-day ruling
  • 15-day automatic approval
  • Notarial engrossment alternative

5.3 Public‑Policy Guidance

International public policy only:
fraud, denial of justice, money‑laundering, and sanctions.

5.4 Arbitration Timing Card

  • 15-day deemed‑grant rule
  • No registrar-issued stamps

5.5 Digital Filing Protocol

  • Electronic acts
  • Electronic service
  • QR‑code verification (in pilot States)

 

  1. PRIORITY AREAS FOR IMPROVEMENT (2026–2028)

 

Table 4 — 2026–2028 Road‑Map

Priority 2026 Deliverable 2027–2028 Follow-Up
Exequatur deadlines Draft amendments CCJA practice direction
Public policy Digest of jurisprudence Formal guideline
Mediation Expedited homologation Harmonized protocol
Foreign judgments Online database Jurisprudence updates
Data Begin collection Annual report
Digital execution Expand e-filing QR‑code interoperability

 

COMPREHENSIVE CONCLUSION

OHADA provides a verified, supranational enforcement model:

  • 15-day arbitral rule
  • 7-day + 15-day mediation rule
  • 3-day injunction‑to‑pay
  • AUPSRVE 2023 execution toolbox
  • CCJA oversight
  • Digitalisation pathway

OHADA’s achievement lies in procedural discipline: publish the form, file electronically, verify service, apply the public‑policy test, issue the order, and, where the law so provides, let silence operate as approval.

 

Judge Tatsi

No comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *