Title: ADR - general
1ADR - general
- Arbitration one of the techniques of ADR
- others are eg mediation, conciliation, expert
determination - In the EU, access is simplified by the ODR
Platform (Reg. 524/2013) there is some
regulation of ADR esp. for consumer disputes (Reg
11/2013) ADR entitites must also fulfill other
functions (data collection, information and
prevention) - Uncitral
- Singapore Convention on International Settlement
Agreements Resulting from Mediation (in force
2020, 6 ratifications, no EU MS yet) on
recognition of written international settlements
in commercial disputes resulting from mediation - promotes ODR for cross-border e-commerce
transactions issued in 2016 Technical Notes on
ODR (rather descriptive) - Informal forms of contract governance in
cross-border contracts, creditors often do not
even try state courts (or not even arbitration),
and use e.g. monitoring reputation management. - Recent proposals for blind arbitration through
crowdsourcing
2ADR escalation - general
- Sometimes dispute escalation clauses or
multi-tier (arbitration) (dispute resolution)
clauses first negotiation, then
mediation/conciliation, or a third party advice,
then litigation (arbitration or courts) - E.g. in art. 20 FIDIC Red Book first
determination by the Engineer, then a Dispute
Adjudication Board (DAB), then ICC Arbitration
eg World bank standard forms eg NEC4 (New
Engineering Contract version 4) - Such a clause is binding, may lead to invalidity
of next step if earlier not made (eg Swiss BG 16
March 2016) - See e.g. also Ebay dispute resolution system.
3 Arbitration - general
- Types of arbitration
- Arbitration based on international public law, eg
ICSID (supra) - Arbitration based on national law, this chapter
- Denationalised arbitration does not really exist.
- Double nature
- On the one hand on a contractual basis (more
correctly 2 contracts 1 between the parties
and 2with the arbitrator(s)) - On the other hand jurisdictional as to
- its procedure (procedure is analogous to
judicial procedure), and - its effects
- 1 impact normal judge has lack of
jurisdiction - 2 the arbitral decision is a jurisdictional
decision (res iudicata) and not merely a
contractually binding decision even if not
enforceable yet (auctoritas, not yet potestas)
4 (National) arbitration statutes
- Where arbitration is based upon national law
(esp. rules on judicial organisation and
procedure) - gt the national law of the place of
arbitration contains the conflict rules - gt which refer to the applicable national law on
(aspects of) arbitration (to be distinguished
from the question of the law applicable to the
case itself)
5 (National) arbitration statutes
- Topics of (national) arbitration statutes are
- 1) the conflict of law rule and
- 2) substantive rules, such as rules concerning
- the arbitration agreement,
- the arbitrability (disputes capable of being
settled by arbitration), - the arbitral procedure,
- the supervision by (national) courts,
- the effects of the award (recognition,
enforcement), - the annulment of the award.
- Sometimes separate rules for domestic and
transnational arbitration (eg Switzerland
Australia International Arbitration Act 2010
French case law identifying a French substantive
international law of arbitration, Cass. 30 III
2004 in Unikod)
6 Harmonisation of arbitration statutes ?
- Partial harmonisation of the arbitration statutes
(successful Uncitral model law ICL 1985, revised
2006, incorporated in many national statutes, in
26 EU MS at least in part, in 13 in full, further
i.a. Australia, in total at least 80 states) - National statutes e.g. in Belgium in Judiciary
Code (revised 2013) in NL in the CCP art. 1020
ff. (since 1-1-2015) in France in CPC UK
Arbitration Act 1996 in the US Federal
Arbitration Act (FAA) 1925, OHADA uniform
Arbitration Act, etc. - Often inspired by the Uncitral model law
- Treaties on recognition and enforcement abroad
see the NY Convention 1958 (successful)
(predecessor Geneva Convention 1923/1927)
7Arbitration (dis)advantages
- Reasons for arbitration advantages and
disadvantages - Flexibility of procedure gtlt uncertainty
- Parties can choose seat, number of arbitrators,
language, division of costs - Confidentiality (no public character of
procedure) - Higher costs for a single instance (arbitratrors
to be paid) gtlt Single instance, in principle no
appeal, usually quicker (not always) - In jurisdictions with class actions avoid class
actions - Arbitrators usually more specialised than judges
in the type of dispute - Internationally easier to obtain recognition and
enforcement than for foreign judgments (success
of NY Convention, infra) - Not every type of relief can be granted by
arbitrators - Not automatically enforceable
- Difficult to oblige third parties to join (but if
linked contracts also provide for arbitration,
arbitration may be easier) and no injunctions
against third parties (eg to produce documents)
8Arbitration questions of contract law
- Possible issues (on following slides)
- Formation (offer acceptance), interpretation
- Validity and invalidity as a contract
- Legal capacity of the parties to conclude such an
agreement - Arbitrability of the issues to be settled (i.e.
can the issue be settled by arbitration ?)
9 law applicable to arbitration agreement
formation validity
- The formation and validity of the arbitration
agreement are in principle determined by the lex
contractus (proper law) of the arbitration
agreement, also called lex arbitri - but conflict of law rule in CH NL is more
favorable it is sufficient that it is valid
according to the law chosen or the law of the
seat of arbitration or, absent choice of law, the
lex causae (law regulating the merits)
10 Law applicable to arbitration agreement
formation validity
- Conflict rule for the lex arbitri? In most places
of arbitration (countries) the conflict rule is - gt 1 choice of law (express or implied),
- gt 2 (subsidiary) place of arbitration (lex
fori) or closest connection (chosen seat being an
important element EWCA in Sulamerica, 2012) (in
Belgium Rome-I is applied overshootingly,
except where national law has a special conflict
rule) - gt Q. whether a choice of law of the contract in
general is also an implied choice of law for that
arbitration agreement. - The lex arbitri (lex contractus) of an
arbitration clause in a wider agreement is
determined separately from the lex contractus of
the contract of which it is a part
11Arbitration contract formation
- What do most applicable laws/statutes (lex
arbitri) provide? - The arbitration agreement (agreement which
obliges the parties to use arbitration in case of
dispute and makes the future award binding for
the parties) - - can be a separate agreement (ad hoc),
- - or a clause in a wider agreement
- (art. 7 (1) Model law).
- In case of several agreement between the parties,
some containing arbitration clauses, courts may
apply an umbrella agreement test (is there an
umbrella agreement that contains the clause)
12Arbitration agreement formation validity
- Separability
- The formation and validity of the arbitration
agreement must be judged separately from that of
the contract it is part of (autonomy or
separability of the arbitration clause) (cfr.
French Cass. 7 May 1963 Gosset or SC US 1967 in
Prima Paint v Flood Conklin in the UK S.6
Arbitration Act and EWCA 2012 in Fiona Trust v.
Privalov). Comp. Art. 16 (1) Model law. - Effect where the clause is valid, only the
arbitrator decides the validity of the rest of
the contract - Where one element of the arbitration clause is
invalid, the rest of the clause remains valid (eg
arbitration clause specifying an arbitral forum
that does not exist)
13 Arbitration agreement formation validity
- What do most applicable statutes (lex arbitri)
provide? Invalidities ? - No or only few specific rules the rules of
general contract law on formation and validity
normally apply (Implied consent by a third party
in Cass.Fr. 26 Oct. 2011 CMN / Fagerdala). Often
a writing reguirement (flexible, art. 7 (2 ff.)
Model law) - Sometimes invalidity of unilateral optional
arbitration clauses (eg Russia California Appeal
Court 19 March 2013 Compton comp. for forum
clauses Cass.(Fr.) 26 Sep 2012 v. 7 Oct. 2015
but deemed valid in Belgium, UK, Germany, Italy,
Spain) - Consumer law next slide
- Some specific rules, e.g. validity of agreement
for arbitration of disputes governed by
overriding mandatory provisions discussed
after arbitrability
14 Arbitration agreement formation validity
consumers
- Validity of arbitration agreement with a consumer
? - In EU in general arbitration clauses not per se
invalid (in concreto evaluation whether unfair or
not) - Belgium as such not unfair
- France presumption of unfairness in domestic
contracts, valid in international contracts
(Cass. 1997 in Renault/V2000) - England unfair for small claims (below 5000 )
- Austria only if concluded after dispute has
arisen - New ADR Directive 11/2013 art.10 consumer has
always the right to take the initiative to go to
Court business must inform consumer about ADR
possibilities - In practice thus often unilateral / asymmetrical
arbitration (or other ADR) clauses - E.g. in the UK the FOS (Financial Ombudsman
Service) makes an assessment of what is fair and
reasonable if the consumer accepts, this is
binding on both parties, but the consumer can
still refuse the proposal and go to Court - unfair character of arbitration clause must be
checked by judge judging the validity of the
arbitral award (C-168/05 Mostaza Claro setting
aside rule that this had to be raised in the
arbitration proceedings itself)
15 Arbitration agreement formation validity
consumers
- Validity of arbitration agreement with a consumer
? - US law
- - no invalidity of arbitration clauses (SC in
2011 and 2013) - - no invalidity of arbitration clauses in
labour contracts excluding collective actions (SC
21 May 2018, Epic systems) - Some specific rules, e.g. validity of agreement
for arbitration of disputes governed by
overriding mandatory provisions discussed
after arbitrability
16 Arbitration agreement formation validity
sports
- ECHR 2 Oct 2018 in Pechstein / Switzerland on
obligatory arbitration for all disputes
concerning sport by professional sporters
(jursdiction of the C.A.S T.A.S.) - Clause is qualified as forced arbitration.
- Effect arbitration procedure must meet all the
requirements of fair trail under art. 6 1 6 ECHR
(which is not the case for truly voluntary
arbitration), including a public hearing
(transparency)
17Arbitration agreement - capacity
- Conflict rule
- Often (but not in common law) a separate
conflict rule as to the law applicable to the
legal capacity of the parties, referring to the
personal law of each party - What do most applicable statutes decide as to the
capacity required for an arbitration agreement ?
(also called arbitrability ratione personae) - In principle the same restrictions on capacity as
in the case of a settlement agreement (eg minors,
insolvent party, ...) - Sometimes additional restrictions on the capacity
for arbitration agreements, such as restrictions
to authority granted to agents, directors,
receivers (in bankruptcy), public agencies,
etc... to dispose of the rights at stake
18 Arbitration agreement arbitrability
- Conflict rule as to the issue of arbitrability
(ratione materiae) -
- often a cumulative conflict rule leading to more
than one law applicable. Enforcement may require - arbitrability under the law of the place of
arbitration - arbitrability under the law applicable to the
issue to be settled (lex causae) - arbitrability under the law of the country of
enforcement. - see art. V.2.a. NY Convention.
- Less cumulative is art. VI,2 ECICA (only lex
contractus arbitri, and own law of the country
refusing recognition) - E.g. Belgian conflict rule (as stated in Cass. 16
Nov 2006 Van Hopplynus, and Cass. 14 Jan. 2010
Sebastian) refers to the application of the
Belgian law on arbitrability in all disputes
where the Belgian courts have jurisdiction
19Arbitrability and public policy
- Arbitrability may be limited in matters governed
by rules of public order, but in general - 1 a dispute is arbitrable even if rules of
public policy apply - 2 the arbitrators may and must apply rules of
public policy that are relevant for the dispute
(e.g. a party invokes that a contract is void
because contrary to competition law), and - 3 the judicial control takes place a posteriori.
- Comp.
- Cass. B. 2 Feb. 1973
- ECJ in Eco Swiss / Benetton (1999) competition
law is part of the public policy exception in
exequatur procedures (a posteriori control) - SC.US in Mitsubishi Motors v. Soler
Chrysler-Plymouth (1985) arbitrable - However, the arbitration agreement may
nevertheless be invalid (see next slide) (maybe
better to tackle the problem not merely a
posteriori?)
20 Arbitrability overriding mandatory law
- Arbitration of disputes governed by overriding
mandatory provisions ex ante control or ex
post ? (comp. discussion on forum clauses) ? - Applications labour law, some consumer
contracts, rules protecting distributors or
commercial agents - Case law in B, Austria, Italy, Germany ex ante
control where parties can waiver their right
only after the dispute has arisen, they cannot on
beforehand be bound to arbitration, unless the
arbitrators are required to apply these mandatory
provisions irrespective of the otherwise
applicable law. - gt traditional Belgian case law conditional
arbitrability disputes concerning termination
of distributorship or commercial agency on
Belgian territory (Belgian Distributorship Act
1961 and Commercial Agency Act 1995) are not
arbitrable unless requiring the arbitrators to
apply these provisions of national law (Cass. 28
June 1979 Cass. 14 Jan 2010 distributorship
Cass. 3 nov 2011 agency). - gt discussion whether still the case under new
Arbitration Act 2013, art. 1676 Belgian Jud.C.
Lower courts have accepted arbitrability in
principle (subject to control a posteriori)
21 Arbitrability overriding mandatory law
- Arbitration of disputes governed by overriding
mandatory provisions - Comp. German case law, OLG München 17 May 2006
(likely danger that foreign tribunal will not
apply the mandatory provision arbitration clause
combined w/ choice of foreign law is presumption
of likeliness). BGH 5 Sep 2012 (Virginia agency
case, forum clause in agency contract) - Comp. English High Court in Accentuate (2009) and
in Fern Computers (2014) - In Austrian OGH 1 March 2017 (T Gmbh /O Inc.),
there was already a partial arbitral award (New
York state) the arbitration clause with a choice
of law referring to NY law was deemed invalid. - As within the EU, forum clauses cannot be set
aside in eg distribution contracts cases, a
subsidiary forum clause could help.
22Arbitration who judges the validity ?
- Who judges the validity and scope of the
arbitration agreement ? - 1. The nominated arbitrator(s)
- The nominated arbitrator has in principle
jurisdiction over the questions of validity of
the arbitration agreement, legal capacity to
refer to arbitration, and arbitrability
(provisional competence-competence - but
subject to a possible annulment of the award by
the court of the place of arbitration). Comp.
Art. 16 Model law - Also jurisdiction over the interpretation of the
arbitration agreement whether the dispute or
action is covered by the arbitration agreement.
Cfr. SCotUS 10th June 2013, Oxford v. Sutter The
arbitrator's construction holds, however good,
bad, or ugly Swiss BG 9 Nov 2015 (not
questioning decision on the facts of the
arbitrator). - 2. The otherwise competent national court (next
slide)
23Arbitration who judges the validity ?
- Who judges the validity and scope of the
arbitration agreement ? - The otherwise competent national court has also
jurisdiction to judge the validity of an
arbitration agreement invoked (as exceptio
arbitrandi) by a party to deny the jurisdiction
of that court, but not always to question an
arbitral decision on the facts on which it bases
jurisdiction. - Some countries give also a negative effect to
the competence-competence, suspending any
judgment on the validity until there is an
arbitral award, unless the arbitration agreement
is manifestly/prima facie invalid (e.g. Swiss
interpretation of art. 178 Swiss PIL French case
law interpreting art. 1448 CCP Cass. 7 June
2006, Tag Heuer case Portugal Malaysia) (in
some arbitration agreements, there is an explicit
clause Imposing the parties to postpone any
judicial action until after an arbitral award
Scott v Avery clause) - (to this competence, Brussels-I does not apply)
- American law to some extent accepts that also
this competence can be delegated to the
arbitrators by a delegation clause - The party contesting the validity has no
obligation to participate in the proceedings
( Dallah -principle, UKSC 2010)
24Effects of a valid arbitration agreement
- Effects of a (valid) arbitration agreement
- - arbitrators have jurisdiction over the dispute
referred to arbitration - - every other judge lacks jurisdiction. This has
to be invoked in limine litis (art. 16 Model
law) - - within the substantive scope of the
arbitration agreement, its up to a second
arbitrator to judge whether an earlier arbitral
award has res iudicata concerning the new claim
(in the US Belco-rule, 2d Cir 1996) - - the court of the place of jurisdiction has
certain powers in relation to arbitration
proceedings in that place (infra). The law of
that place may provide the possibility of an
anti-suit injunction prohibiting the other party
to pursue court proceedings instead of
arbitration (eg UK SC 2013 in Ust-Kamenogorsk)
(but not against proceedings before courts in the
EU, ECJ in West Tankers) - - provisional measures next slide
25Effects of a valid arbitration agreement
provisional measures
- Arbitral tribunal normally has power to grant
interim measures (art. 17 ff. Model law) - Courts may still take provisional and protective
measures (summary proceedings), (art. 17J
Model law) - Parties may still take protective measures (e.g.
conservatory seizure) after permission of the
state judge where such permission is required - Insofar as there is no Emergency Arbitrator
appointed with this task (cfr. New ICC rules) in
Dutch law only insofar as arbitrator is not able
to do it (or not timely). Question whether
arbitrartion agreement cn prohibit the parties
taking such actions in court. - Eg art. 44 UK Arbitration Act In the new
Belgian Act, art. 1691 Jud.C. concurrent
jurisdiction arbitrator/courts -
26 Effects of a valid arbitration agreement
- Effects of a (valid) arbitration agreement
(cont.) - Effects for successors ?
- - assignee will normally be bound (see Ch.
assignment) - - administrator in bankruptcy in principle bound
(eg Belgium), but not necessarily always (eg a
case under Polish law accepted by the Swiss SBG
31 March 2009) -
27Arbitration agreement - content
- Possible content of an arbitration agreement
- Definition of the disputes covered by
arbitration - often restrictive interpretation of arbitration
clauses - Clarify whether arbitrator has authority to
decide on costs to be borne by the losing party - Possible reference to the procedural rules of an
Arbitration Institute - (next slides)
28Arbitration institutions
- Possible reference to procedural rules - (1) of
an Arbitration Institute - Specialised (sector specific) international
arbitration institutions (e.g. commodity
arbitrations (eg by GAFTA, Grain and Feed Trade
Association), WIPO arbitration center (IP),
T.A.S. C.A.S Lausanne for Sports ARIAS
(Insurance and Reinsurance arbitration society
UK) LMA (London Maritime Association) - General international arbitration institute ICC
has a Court of Arbitration that supervises
arbitral proceedings (intervenes in nominations,
payment of costs, control of formal validity of
award, respect for time schedule) Since 2016,
ICC publishes composition of arbitral tribunals
(more transparency) - Common Court of OHADA at Abidjan is also a
Court of Arbitration in the same sense as the
ICC - National arbitration institutions and similar
next slide - the PCA (Permanent Court of Arbitration) in The
Hague (NL), an international organisation
specialised in disputes of public international
law (s. infra)
29Arbitration institutions
- National arbitration institutions and similar,
main institutions - LCIA (London Court of international
arbitration)(an English company) - CIETAC (China international Economic and Trade
Arbitration Commission) - Swiss Chambers Arbitration Institution (Swiss
rules) - SCC (Stockholm Chamber of Commerce)
- Paris Arbitration Rules
- VIAC (Vienna International Arbitral Centre)
- Cepani (Belgium)
- AAA (American Arbitration Association) and its
International Centre for Dispute Resolution
(ICDR) - DIAC (Dubai International Arbitration Centre)
- DIS (German Institution of Arbitration)
- KLRCA (Kuala Lumpur Regional Centre for
Arbitration) - MKAS (Moscow International Commercial Arbitration
Court) - SIAC (Singapore International Arbitration Centre)
- CEAC (Chinese European Arbitration Centre
Hamburg) - HKIAC Hongkong
- Most important seats London, Paris, Hongkong,
Singapore, Geneva, Stockholm, N York.
30Arbitration agreement - content
- Possible reference to procedural rules (2)
- In case of ad hoc arbitration, parties have to
regulate these matters themselves in the
agreement (supplemented by default rules of the
arbitration statute) - Intermediate solution arbitration according to
the UNCITRAL Arbitration rules (version 1976
revised 2010) detailed rules, eg also
possibility of nominating ad hoc an appointing
authority . Since 2010, the PCA (Permanent Court
of Arbitration) is the indirect appointing
authority by default, i.e. will appoint the
appointing authority if parties have not agreed
upon one (art. 6 Uncitral) - The PCA also has its own rules for cases where a
state or international organisation is involved
(consolidated in the PCA Arbitration rules 2012)
(dealing more in detail also with issues of
international public law)
31Place of arbitration
- Determination of the place of arbitration (seat).
- The seat is a legal notion it links the
arbitration procedure to a specific country (but
does not oblige the arbitrators to conduct
procedures there not necessarily the venue of
hearings comp. 20(2) Model law). - Relevance
- - determines which court is competent to
supervise the arbitration, for challenges to
arbitrators, to decide an action for annulment of
the award, etc. (juge dappui) (the court will
refuse to help if it deems the arbitration
against its international public order) - - determines the conflict of law rules
indicating the law applicable to the arbitration
- - provides the default procedural rules (infra)
but arbitrator not bound if not mandatory - - localises the arbitral award (this will eg
determine whether it is localised in a country
that has ratified a Treaty on recognition and
enforcement of arbitral awards). Art. V(1)(A) NY
Convention requires the award to comply with the
law of the country where it was made
32Arbitration agreement content
- Determination of the number of arbitrators (in
many countries must be uneven) - Possibly rules on challenging impartiality
(unless left to the court), eg in the ICC rules
within 30 days since obtaining the information - Choice of the language(s) of the procedure
(language of the submissions may be relevant
also for evidence) (see also art. 22 Model law) - Choice of the law applicable to the arbitration
agreement (supra) - (NB. Choice of the substantive law to be applied
to the dispute, but this is strictly speaking not
part of the arbitration agreement itself)
33Arbitration appointment arbitrators
- Appointment of the arbitrators
- Number default rule is 5 (art. 10 Model law)
- If 3 arbitrators, usually one nominated by each
party, the 3rd ( umpire ) is either nominated
by both of them together or by the arbitration
institute (comp. Art. 11 (1) Model law) - Multi-party arbitration Uncitral has specific
rules on appointment (also some national statutes
do and some rules of arbitration institutions)
also specific rules in the LCIA Rules - Acceptance by the arbitrator(s) requires
independence and impartiality duty to disclose
possible conflicts of interests. Possible
challenge of an arbitrator (art. 12 ff Model
law). - Art. 1686 Belgian Jud.C esp. in case of
repeat arbitration Cass.Fr. 20 Oct. 2010 X v.
Prodim Logidis - See IBA Guidelines on Conflict of Interest in
Internat. Arbitration (revised 2014), and the
broader approach of the ICC Guidance on Conflict
Disclosure by Arbitrators (2016) - Since 1 Jan 2016, ICC publishes the appointments
of arbitrators - But parties must challenge shortly after
obtaining the information that would allow an
objection Cass. Fr. 17 June 2017, Orange /
Guinée Equitoriale
34Arbitration conduct of proceedings
- Agreement on fees expensens arbitrators (in
case of institutional arbitration under
supervision of the Institution) - Possible arrangements at the start of
proceedings, often in terms of reference - - definition of the dispute and the claims of
the parties (esp. a Statement of claim ) - - establishment of a timetable / calendar
- - possible appointment of an administrative
secretary (see ICC note 1995/2012) - - manner in which parties will present their
arguments, disclose documents, present evidence,
etc. - As to taking evidence, parties could refer to
the IBA-Rules on taking evidence (1999, revised
2010) (compromise between continental and
American traditions). According to Art. 17 Model
law, the arbitral tribunal may require
disclosure. A more continental model are the
Prague rules 2018 - If not already in the terms of reference,
possible case management conference (required
in new ICC rules) -
35Arbitration conduct of proceedings
- Some rules have an early determination
procedure (eg Singapore IAC rule 29 if manifestly
outside jurisdiction or without merits), or an
Expedited procedure for smaller claims (ICC
rules 2016 sole arbitrator rules apply by
default under 2 mio USD, unless parties
explicitly opt for standard procedure) - Under most arbitration laws, a defense of lack of
jurisdiction must be raised in limine litis
(comp. Model law art. 16 (2))
36Arbitration law applicable to the procedure
- Procedural rules (incl. rules on supervision by
state court) - Law applicable to the procedure ? (also called
lex curiae) - Law indicated by the conflict rule of the place
of arbitration conflict rule usually refers to
the lex fori, i.e. rules of the place of
arbitration. Arbitrator may deviate if not
mandatory. - Some countries have separate procedural rules for
international arbitration or refer to such rules,
eg when the ECICA is ratified (European
Convention on International Commercial
Arbitration, Geneva 1961, 31 ratifications incl.
11 EU member states, paneuropean) - Some Institutions have in their rules also
detailed guidelines on the conduct of the
parties representatives (e.g. LCIA rules 2014)
37Arbitration procedural rules
- Procedural rules determine
- the basic rules for the proceedings (classical
rules such as adversary character, possibility to
decide in absentia (by default), whether partial
awards possible, whether dissenting opinions may
be made public, duty to motivate award,
notification of the award, ...) - the rules on taking evidence and on valuation of
proof. Arbitrators may apppoint experts (art. 26
Model law). If expert examination is required,
the ICC Rules for Experts may help (deal with
proposal of experts by ICC, appointment rules,
administration rules) - Whether curia novit ius or law has to be invoked
(and possibly proven) by the parties - Next slide
38Arbitration procedural rules
- Procedural rules may determine in which cases the
state court can help / intervene - E.g. parties can ask a court order where the
arbitrator has no authority, eg for an Actio ad
exhibendum against a 3rd party (order to produce
documents) - E.g. replacement of arbitrator(s)
- See also Art. IV ECICA on remaining jurisdiction
of courts in relation to arbitration - The request may be within the jurisdiction of
the courts of the place of arbitration - If not, the question arises how to seize a
foreign court having jurisdiction over that
evidence. See Ch. 11 on taking evidence abroad.
Question whether arbitrator or arbitrating
parties can directly go to the foreign court or
not depends on the rules of jurisdiction in
that country. E.g. in the US foreign litigants
can directly request such a court order on the
basis of S. 1782 USC (now usually accepted that
this is also possible in case of foreign
arbitration). Idem art. 27 Model law.
39Arbitration the award
- The award must be
- - signed by the arbitrators, at least by a
majority (art. 31 (1) Model law) - - stating reasons (motivated) (art. 31 (2) Model
law) - In case of institutional arbitration, the
Institution may have the power to check the award
as to its form (scrutiny), not substance (eg ICC
rules art. 27, Cepani rules) - Some countries require the award to be filed
(deposited) in court
40Challenging the arbitral award
- In principle no appeal (unless agreed) (34(1)
Model law) some arbitration rules provide an
optional appellate procedure (eg new AAA rules) - Challenging in court action for annulment
according to the rules of the place of
arbitration (seat) - In most countries only limited grounds for
annulment no valid arbitration agreement, no
fair trial (incl. arbitrator not independent),
award ultra petita (for Belgium, see art. 1717
3 Jud.C (version 2013) for the UK S. 67
Arbitration Act, etc.). Comp. Art. 34(2) Model
law. - Eg Cassation (Fr) 20 Oct. 2010, Somoclest
v. DV construction. - An error of law is not an excess of power (eg UK
HL 2005 in Lesotho Highlands) - However, where the arbitration rules
themselves contain a procedure to challenge
impartiality, that must be followed first
Cass.F. 25 June 2014 in Avax/Tecnimont - In some countries annulment can be excluded
contractually if none of the parties is domestic
(CH, B, Sweden) (rare in practice) - Usually short time periods (art. 34(3) Model law
3 months)
41Challenging the arbitral award
- Effect of setting aside ? same arbitrators, new
arbitrators, state court ? - gt In principle the case has to be settled by a
new arbitration procedure. - Challenge by a third party ?
- According to Belgian law, third party opposition
is possible as against a judgment (decision of
Constitutional Court of 16 Feb 2017) (which Court
has jurisdiction ? Probably the same court as for
annulment)
42Arbitration domestic enforcement
- Enforcement in the country of the award
exequatur can be obtained in simplified
proceedings - - on unilateral request (without notice
procedure) - - merely a marginal control of the substance
- E.g. S. 66 Arbitration Act (Engl W)
- Third party involvement can simplify enforcement
(third party holding the money in dispute)
43Arbitration enforcement abroad
- Enforcement abroad can take place alternatively
on the basis of - the NY Convention 1958 (159 member states in
2018) - national law
- any other convention
44Arbitration enforcementNY Convention (159)
45Arbitration enforcement abroad
- Enforcement on the basis of the NY Convention
- In member states of that Convention (159 in 2018
missing i.a. Taiwan, Iraq) - Sphere of application territorial or
non-domestic test in art. 1 - gt Eg Chinese Supreme Court 18 Dec 2013 refused
Korea arbitral award between 2 Chinese companies
related to a joint venture in China - Only arbitral awards, eg no international
commercial settlement agreements resulting from
conciliation (UNCITRAL is developing an
instrument on recognition and enforceability of
ICSAs). - Quid awards for interim measures, etc ? Disputed
46Arbitration enforcement abroad
- Enforcement on the basis of the NY Convention
1958 in member states of that Convention - Simplified proceedings (additional exequatur of
the state of the place of arbitration is not
required, only exequatur in the state of
enforcement) - National law determines whether appeal is
possible against the decision on exequatur, and
if appeal suspends enforceability or not. - NB. Cases on NY Convention published in Yearbooks
Commercial Arbitration.
47Arbitration enforcement abroad
- NY Convention
- Art. 5 - only limited grounds for refusal
(exceptions), esp. - (1a) Lack of capacity of a party
- (1a) Invalidity of the arbitration agreement
according to the lex contractus) - (1c) Jurisdiction exceeded (ultra petita)
- (2a) Arbitrability of the dispute is excluded by
the lex contractus, the lex fori of the place of
arbitration or the lex fori of the place of
enforcement - (2b) Contrary to public policy of receiving
country - Esp. the public policy exception is widely used
by some countries, eg Russia practice
statements of the Supreme Arbitrazh Court (new
version 2013, Information Letter no. 156) - The ILA issued a recommendation to restrict the
public policy exception (ILA recommendation on
public policy 2002)
48Arbitration enforcement abroad
- The NY Convention is not exclusive (art. VII.1),
enforcement can also be asked (and take place) on
the basis of - ECICA (more restricted list of grounds for
setting aside award) - other multilateral conventions,
- bilateral conventions, eg the 1925 Belgian-Dutch
jurisdiction and enforcement convention also
covers arbitral decisions - possibly national law
- gt Choice to be made by the defendant (clearly,
otherwise NY Convention applies) and in toto
(no cherry-picking) - Enforcement despite annullment in the country of
the seat ? - Exceptionally accepted by English Court in Yukos
/ Rosneft (2014) - Art. 5 NYC states that in such case recognition
may be refused (Court in country of
enforcement has to judge whether it recognises
the annulment)