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Summary Arbitration General Principles FULL notes

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Uploaded on
March 1, 2022
Number of pages
9
Written in
2019/2020
Type
Summary

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Arbitration – the general
principles
 What arbitration is.
 Why arbitration is considered desirable by commercial parties.
 Key principles of arbitration, including those set out within the English Arbitration Act 1996.
 The significance of the New York Convention in relation to the enforcement of arbitral awards.
 How to answer problem and essay questions on arbitration.


What is arbitration?
O’Callaghan v Coral Racing Ltd (CA, 19 November 1998) (Hirst LJ):
‘To my mind the hallmark of the arbitration process is that it is a procedure to determine the legal
rights and obligations of the parties judicially, with binding effect, which is enforceable in law, thus
reflecting in private proceedings the role of a civil court of law.’


- Alternative to litigation in court
- Form of ADR


• Consensual in origin (unlike litigation).
• Arbitration agreement.
• Arbitration is triggered by this
• Contained in the contract – parties include an arbitration agreement in initial
contract on transaction
• Requires a dispute.
• Triggered by a dispute


Can be domestic (parties in the same jurisdiction) or international (parties across different
jurisdiction - NY convention)


Why arbitration?
Resolving dispute: court (litigation) vs arbitration
- Cheaper than court (often/in principle)
- Flexibility of rules (of evidence?) can make it more informal than litigation
- Less public than a court hearing (private)
- Often quicker than court

, Arbitrator = expert in the field
- Commercial specialism
- Help them get to a commercially sensible outcome (rather than a strictly legal one)
- Pragmatic outcome which is sensitive to their sector or particular dispute
- Both parties agree on the arbitrator
o Parties choose who decides their case
o More confident in outcome
o More satisfaction in the end, even if they lost


Consensual
- Litigation is not
- Both parties agree to go to arbitration
- With litigation = don’t have a choice


Privacy + confidentiality:
- Main reason parties choose arbitration
- Court hearing = public
o media attention
o parties names out there
o names and facts in the court’s judgement, what they are being sued for, how much
money they are suing for etc.
o judge will set out the different factual accusations and which side the judge agrees
with depending on the evidence
o not only does the public know there is a judgement, they also know that the judge
did not believe one party/business = not good for reputation
- arbitration = avoids all these problems
o very beneficial for the reputation of the business parties


Why not arbitration?
 Grounds to appeal = limited (can exclude this beforehand too)
o Less flexibility if not happy with the outcome and want to appeal award
 Might be best to first try something which will not result in binding decision (mediation or
negotiation) – much more control over the outcome
 Might not be able to agree on various procedural aspects, such as the arbitrator
 It can be expensive
 Appeal – in Court of Appeal =confidentiality is lost = defeats the purpose
 If legal issues involve multiple parties = can be much more difficult in arbitration than in
litigation
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