Statute of Limitations
The statute of limitations is a legal concept that results in the loss of a creditor’s right to seek protection of their claim due to their inactivity over a period of time prescribed by law.
In other words, limitation occurs when the creditor does not demand fulfilment of their claim from the debtor within the legally specified period.
The Obligations Act stipulates that, once limitation occurs, the creditor loses the right to demand fulfillment of the obligation. In practical terms, when a claim becomes time-barred, the creditor can no longer initiate court proceedings—whether by filing a lawsuit or an enforcement proposal—to require the debtor to perform their obligation.
Since the debtor’s status as a debtor does not cease upon limitation, if the debtor voluntarily pays a time-barred debt, they are not entitled to request a refund of the amount paid.
It is important to underline that the court does not consider limitation ex officio; therefore, if the creditor initiates proceedings to recover a time-barred claim, it is up to the debtor to raise the statute of limitations as a defence.
Interruption of Limitation
Under the Obligations Act, limitation is interrupted when the debtor acknowledges the debt.
Acknowledgment may be made directly to the creditor or indirectly, for example by making a partial payment, providing security, or paying interest.
Limitation is also interrupted by filing a lawsuit or any other action taken by the creditor against the debtor before a court or another competent body aimed at establishing, securing, or enforcing the claim.
Therefore, a written or oral demand by the creditor to the debtor to fulfill the obligation is not sufficient to interrupt the limitation period.
When limitation is interrupted, the limitation period starts to run anew, and the time elapsed before the interruption is not counted toward the statutory limitation period.
In the case of acknowledgment by the debtor, the new period begins on the date of acknowledgment. If limitation is interrupted by filing a lawsuit, an enforcement proposal, or similar action, the new limitation period begins on the day the proceedings are concluded or terminated in another manner.
Suspension of Limitation
The Obligations Act explicitly provides that limitation does not run in the following situations:between spouses; between parents and children while parental rights last; between a ward and their guardian and the social welfare authority during the guardianship period and until accounts are submitted; between persons living in a non-marital union as long as that union exists; during mobilisation, imminent threat of war, or wartime for claims of persons on military duty; for claims of persons employed in another’s household against the employer or family members living with the employer, for as long as that employment relationship lasts; and during any period in which the creditor is unable to pursue their claim in court due to insurmountable obstacles.
Once the legal cause for suspension ceases to exist, the limitation period continues to run, and the time that elapsed before the suspension is counted toward the statutory limitation period.
Limitation Periods
The limitation period begins to run on the first day after the day on which the creditor was entitled to demand fulfilment of the obligation, i.e., the first day after the claim became due.
The general limitation period is five years, while mutual claims arising from commercial contracts concerning the trade of goods and services become time-barred after three years.
The general limitation period applies only when a different period is not prescribed by law.
For example, periodic payments become time-barred after three years; claims for damages become time-barred three years from the day the injured party learned of the damage and the person who caused it (subjective period), and in any case five years from the occurrence of the damage(objective period).
Claims established by a final court decision or a notarial deed become time-barred after ten years, etc.
