Serving documents (recast)

Poland

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Poland

FINDING COMPETENT COURTS/AUTHORITIES

The search tool below will help you to identify court(s)/authority(ies) competent for a specific European legal instrument. Please note that although every effort has been made to ascertain the accuracy of the results, there may be some exceptional cases concerning the determination of competence that are not necessarily covered.

Poland

Serving documents


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Article 3(1) – Transmitting agencies

The court conducting the proceedings (a district court (sąd rejonowy), regional court (sąd okręgowy) or court of appeal (sąd apelacyjny), or the Supreme Court (Sąd Najwyższy)).

Article 3(2) – Receiving agencies

The district court in whose jurisdiction the document is to be served.

Article 3(4)(c) – Means of receipt of documents

Documents may be sent by post.

Article 3(4)(d) – Languages that may be used for the completion of the standard form set out in Annex I

In addition to Polish, the forms may be completed in English or German.

Article 4 – Central body

Ministry of Justice, Department of International Cooperation and Human Rights

Al. Ujazdowskie 11, 00-950 Warsaw, tel.: +48 22 23 90 870

email: sekretariat.dwmpc@ms.gov.pl

Article 7 – Assistance in address enquiries

Detailed information to assist in determining an address pursuant to Article 7(2)(a), as read in conjunction with subparagraph (1)(c)

Home address in the case of natural persons:

an entity with a legal interest in verifying the address of a person to be served with a document may apply to any mayor of a municipality, town or city for information on the person’s address. This information can be obtained by submitting an application. The application may be submitted to only one municipal authority and is subject to a fee of PLN 31 (payable to the account of the municipal authority to which the application is submitted); proof of payment must be attached to the application. The applicant must also demonstrate the legal interest on the basis of which data from the register are to be made available. This interest can be demonstrated by means of a document establishing a legal obligation to act in a particular way (e.g. lawsuit, bailiff’s letter, contract).

Addresses of businesses (general, limited-liability or investment-limited partnerships, limited-liability or joint-stock companies, cooperatives, state-owned enterprises, R&D entities, foreign enterprises and their branches, and mutuals):

these are available online in the register kept by the National Court Register (Krajowy Rejestr Sądowy). The register is kept in accordance with the principles of formal openness (i.e. everyone has the right to access the data in the register).

Information available online can be found via the following links:

Data on natural persons engaged in economic activity are collected in the Central Business Register (Centralna Ewidencja i Informacja o Działalności Gospodarczej), access to which is open to everyone.

Information referred to in Article 7(2)(c)

The authority which receives the application (the receiving agency in Poland) is not obliged and generally does not request the registers in question to determine an address if the one indicated by the receiving agency proves to be incorrect. In practice, if the authority considers it appropriate, it may assess whether there is an obvious error in the address or, if the transmitting agency indicates that the address has been taken from a publicly accessible register, check whether the address is up to date in accordance with the data in that register.

Article 8 – Transmission of documents

In addition to Polish, the form may be completed in English or German.

Article 12 – Refusal to accept a document

not applicable

Article 13 – Date of service

not applicable

Article 14 – Certificate of service and copy of the document served

The form may be completed in Polish, English or German.

Article 15 – Costs of service

Please note that the original language version of this page Polish has been amended recently. The language version you are now viewing is currently being prepared by our translators.

A fee of PLN 60 must be paid for the serving of documents by a bailiff if the defendant did not personally accept the documents the first time they were served (Article 139(2) of the Code of Civil Procedure (Kodeks postępowania cywilnego)).

Article 17 – Service by diplomatic agents or consular officers

Poland opposes service by diplomatic or consular agents within its territory, unless documents are to be served on nationals of the Member State transferring the document.

Article 19 – Electronic service

not applicable

Article 20 – Direct service

Poland opposes the method of service referred to in this Article within its territory.

Article 22 – Defendant not entering an appearance

An application for relief from the effects of the expiry of a deadline lodged one year after it expired is admissible only in exceptional cases.

Article 29 – Relationship with agreements or arrangements between Member States

not applicable

Article 33(2) – Notification on the early use of the decentralised IT-system

not applicable

Last update: 17/09/2024

The national language version of this page is maintained by the respective Member State. The translations have been done by the European Commission service. Possible changes introduced in the original by the competent national authority may not be yet reflected in the translations. The European Commission accepts no responsibility or liability whatsoever with regard to any information or data contained or referred to in this document. Please refer to the legal notice to see copyright rules for the Member State responsible for this page.