Portugal
Portuguese law provides for, and clearly defines, different kinds of interim measures. They include:
- Provisional measures, which are intended to maintain an existing situation unaltered and avoid prejudicial mutations; and
- Conservatory measures, which are intended to anticipate the decision that the Court will issue in the principal case, to ascertain the applicant’s threatened rights.
The Court can issue an interim measure only if the applicant provides evidence that:
- there is strong prima facie case that the right it claims exists (fumus boni iuris);
- the respondent has breached such right or is on the verge of doing so;
- such breach is likely to cause irreparable harm, or harm which is not easily remediable;
- there is urgency (periculum in mora); and
- the relief sought is proportionate to the detriment of the respondent.
In addition to the general interim relief proceedings, the Civil Code prescribes the following specific interim measures:
- Provisional reversion of possession;
- Suspension of company resolutions;
- Temporary alimony;
- Arbitration of provisional compensation;
- Seizure;
- Embargo on new work; and/or
- Enrolment.
In some cases, the Court may provisionally decide on interim relief requests without holding any hearing and therefore without involving the respondent, i.e. ex parte. In such cases, the courts would re-establish the necessary dialogue (and due process) with both parties in a second phase after the interim measure is rendered. In this second phase, a hearing will be scheduled within 15 days after the order whereby the interim measure is issued. If the respondent files a response, the interim measure will be decided within two months, although in practice, it may take much longer).
All interim relief proceedings are dependent on the respective main proceedings, in which a final decision regarding the initial issues will be made. Following procedural reforms in 2013, it is possible to request the “reversal of the litigation” (“inversão do contencioso”), which means that the main issues can be decided within the interim relief proceedings and, if granted, the claimant would not have to file the main action.
The procedural timings vary depending on the measure requested and on the specificities of each case, but ranges from approximately two to 18 months. However, where the proceedings are ex parte (only admissible for cases of embargo on new work), the judge may take just a couple of days to order the relief.
A party can appeal the order granted pursuant to an interim relief application within 15 days of the communication or service of the order granted. Just as for general appeals, an appeal of an interim relief order does not have suspensory effect unless ordered by the court.
When there is a judicial seizure of assets, an enforcement agent (suggested by the applicant and appointed by the court) provides for the sale of the assets and the net price is deposited in a credit institution and held to the order of the enforcement agent, who must communicate it to the court within five days of the sale. Should the auction not realise the required amount, there are specific rules for the following sale attempts for different kinds of assets. For example, if an auction of immovable assets fails, an attempt must be made to sell them through private bids to be submitted in writing to the enforcement agent.