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carte blanche
1. What are the powers of carte blanche?

1. Special entrustment means full authorization. In litigation, we can't talk about carte blanche, but about special authorized agency, which is equivalent to what is usually called carte blanche. Plenipotentiary means to admit, waive or change the litigation request on behalf of the parties, make a settlement, file an appeal, collect litigation documents, collect case money, check information and materials, and have the right to decide on behalf of the parties, and the parties themselves cannot appear in court.

2. Legal basis: Article 62 of People's Republic of China (PRC) Civil Procedure Law.

If another person is entrusted to represent the lawsuit, a power of attorney signed or sealed by the client must be submitted to the people's court.

The power of attorney must specify the entrusted matters and authority. An agent ad litem must have the special authorization of the client, and can admit, waive or change the claim, make a settlement, file a counterclaim or appeal on his behalf.

The power of attorney sent or entrusted by China * * and China citizens living abroad must be authenticated by China * * and China's embassy or consulate in that country; If there is no embassy or consulate, it shall be certified by the embassy or consulate of a third country that has diplomatic relations with the people of China, and then by the people of China and the embassy or consulate of China in a third country, or by the local patriotic overseas Chinese delegation.

Second, what are the scope of discretion?

The scope of discretion is as follows:

1, the power of attorney mainly refers to the scope stipulated in the entrustment agreement;

2. The agency authority of the entrusted agent ad litem comes from the entrustment of the parties, legal agents or legal agents, so the entrusted agent ad litem can only conduct litigation within the scope authorized by the client;

3, only within the scope authorized by the principal to implement litigation agency behavior, the legal consequences of its behavior can be borne by the principal.