Legal AI in Argentina: Case File Management Under the CCCN and CPCCN
The 2015 National Civil and Commercial Code renewed Argentine private law. Learn how legal AI helps Argentine lawyers manage case files under the CCCN, CPCCN, and the electronic notification system.
The Argentine Legal System: CCCN and Procedural Federalism
Argentina has a peculiar legal system: substantive law (civil, commercial, criminal) is unified at the federal level, but procedural law is the responsibility of each province. The result is 24 different civil procedural codes (plus the CPCCN for federal courts and CABA).
The National Civil and Commercial Code (CCCN), in force since August 2015, unified the old Vélez Sársfield Civil Code with the Commercial Code into a single body of 2,671 articles. This code introduced substantial changes in civil liability, contracts, family law, and property rights.
The CPCCN and Federal Civil Process
The National Civil and Commercial Procedure Code (CPCCN) governs proceedings before federal civil and commercial courts and the Autonomous City of Buenos Aires (CABA). It is the reference for:
- National Civil Courts (CABA)
- Federal Civil and Commercial Courts (nationwide)
- National Civil Court of Appeals
The main process types are:
- Ordinary Process (Arts. 319-496 CPCCN): máximum evidentiary breadth, for more complex matters
- Summary Process (Art. 498 CPCCN): for urgent matters (amparo before special law, eviction in some cases)
- Execution Process (Arts. 499-589 CPCCN): enforcement of judgments, executive titles (promissory notes, mortgages, pledges)
Critical Procedural Deadlines in the CPCCN
Deadlines are counted in judicial business days (unless otherwise provided):
| Action | Deadline |
|---|---|
| Answer to complaint (ordinary) | 15 business days (Art. 338 CPCCN) |
| Filing of appeal | 5 business days (Art. 244 CPCCN) |
| Brief of grievances | 10 business days (Art. 259 CPCCN) |
| Answer to brief of grievances | 10 business days |
| Federal Extraordinary Appeal | 10 business days (Art. 257 CPCCN) |
Deadline computation in Argentina has its peculiarities: the judicial recess in January and July suspends deadlines, and the judicial year begins on February 1st.
Electronic Notifications: The PJN System
The Electronic Notifications Office (ONE) and the National Judiciary Electronic Notification Portal (PJN) transformed Argentina's notification system. Since the pandemic, most judicial notifications in national courts are made via:
- Electronic summons (reformed Art. 143 CPCCN)
- Notification to the constituted electronic address
The modern Argentine lawyer must monitor their PJN inbox daily. Deadlines begin running from the day after electronic notification, regardless of when it was actually read.
A legal AI system integrated with the PJN can automatically alert when a notification is received, calculate the deadline, and register it in the firm's calendar.
The CSJN and Argentine Case Law
The National Supreme Court of Justice (CSJN) is the highest court. Its rulings are binding on lower courts in cases submitted to its review and have strong persuasive effect on other judiciary.
Sources of Argentine case law include:
- CIJur (Judicial Information Center): official PJN repository with rulings from all federal instances
- La Ley, El Derecho, Jurisprudencia Argentina: legal publishers with consolidated databases
- Microjuris: digital platform covering doctrine and case law from all provinces
Efficient searching in these databases is critical. A lawyer may invest 2-4 hours searching for the right National Civil Court of Appeals ruling to support an opposition. AI reduces that time to minutes.
CCCN in Practice: Areas of Greatest Impact
The CCCN introduced substantial changes that Argentine lawyers must know in detail:
Civil Liability (Arts. 1708-1780 CCCN)
Attribution factors were unified: the CCCN admits subjective liability (fault/intent) and objective liability (created risk, guarantee, equity). The means/result obligations distinction is maintained with nuances.
Contracts (Arts. 957-1091 CCCN)
The CCCN introduced the theory of unforeseeability (Art. 1091), consumer contracts (Arts. 1092-1122) with enhanced consumer protection, and banking contracts (Arts. 1378-1420).
Family and Succession (Arts. 401-723 and 2277-2531 CCCN)
Same-sex marriage, the de facto union as a recognized legal figure, shared custody as the rule, and the new legitimate portion of heirs are developments with daily impact on practice.
The Argentine Law Firm in the Digital Age
Argentine law firms that adopt legal AI as a work assistant gain concrete advantages:
- Case law research: semantic search in CIJur and private databases, with currency verification and automatic citation
- Brief drafting: generation of first draft of complaints, answers, or briefs of grievances with the CPCCN structure
- Deadline control: integrated calendar with WhatsApp or email alerts for each judicial recess, procedural deadline, and hearing
- Contract analysis: review of clauses under the CCCN with identification of abusive clauses (Arts. 988-989 CCCN)
Argentina has a deep legal tradition and a highly qualified bar. AI doesn't replace that expertise, it enhances it, freeing lawyers from repetitive tasks to focus on strategic analysis and defending their clients.
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