China Justice Observer

中司观察

EnglishArabicChinese (Simplified)DutchFrenchGermanHindiItalianJapaneseKoreanPortugueseRussianSpanishSwedishHebrewIndonesianVietnameseThaiTurkishMalay

First Case of China’s Civil Code Pronounced in Shanghai Financial Court - China Legal News

Mon, 01 Feb 2021
Categories: China Legal Trends

avatar

 

On 4 Jan. 2021, Shanghai Financial Court, for the first time, applied the Civil Code in a case concerning financial loan contract disputes.

On 4 Jan. 2021, Shanghai Financial Court, for the first time, applied the Civil Code to conclude a case concerning financial loan contract disputes in the second instance, ruling that the lending institution has an obligation to clearly disclose the actual interest rate in the loan contract and that due to its failure to disclose, the lending institution shall return the interest charged over the interest rate agreed in the contract.
  
In September 2017, the plaintiff and the defendant signed the loan contract, agreeing that the specific loan interest rate shall be subject to the repayment schedule, with an average annual interest rate of 11.88%

Thereafter, the plaintiff refunded 15 installments of principal and the interest on schedule according to the contract. Based on the actual amount of principal and interest, the plaintiff believed that the actual borrowing rate was 20.94%, far higher than 11.88% agreed in the contract, and the defendant never disclosed the actual interest rate during the performance of the loan contract. So the plaintiff filed a lawsuit in court, requesting the defendant to return the overcharged interest of over CNY 880,000 and the interest loss for use of funds.

After hearing, the first-instance court held that the repayment schedule set out the total amount of principal and interest of each installment and the remaining principal amount, which was signed by the borrower for confirmation, so there was no concealment of the interest rate and the plaintiff's claims were dismissed.

Shanghai Financial Court, after trial, held that pursuant to the relevant provisions of the Civil Code, the provider of the format clause shall take reasonable measures to remind the other party of the clauses containing a significant interest and to clarify the legal consequences in case of failure to perform the obligations. In this case, the repayment schedule concluded by the parties only states the amount of principal and interest of each installment and the remaining amount of principal, without mentioning the actual interest rate, the total amount of interest or the calculation method thereof. The repayment schedule is not sufficient to reveal the actual interest rate on the loan contract. The first part of the loan contract states that the average annual interest rate is 11.88% and that the repayment method is repayment by installments. If the borrower requests to calculate the interest at the interest rate of 11.88% and with the remaining principal as the base, which conforms to the common understanding of ordinary reasonable persons as well as transaction practice and the principle of good faith, such requests should be supported. 

Shanghai Financial Court made the final judgment, quashing the original judgment and ordering the defendant to return the overcharged interest of over CNY 840,000 to the plaintiff. 

 

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.

China Revises Marriage Registration Regulation

China's revised marriage registration rules, effective May 2025, eliminate location restrictions, simplify procedures by removing hukou requirements, and align divorce processes with the Civil Code's cooling-off period.

China’s SPC Issues Foreign State Immunity Case Guidelines

In March 2025, China's Supreme People's Court (SPC) issued procedural guidelines for handling civil cases involving foreign state immunity, implementing the country's shift from absolute to restrictive immunity under the new Foreign State Immunity Law.