Transnational Construction Arbitration
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CHAPTER 12
Remedies at the seat and enforcement of international arbitral awards: res judicata, issue estoppel and abuse of process in English law
Remedies at the seat and enforcement of international arbitral awards: res judicata, issue estoppel and abuse of process in English law
Introduction
12.1 An often unexplored problem in international commercial arbitration is the relationship between the remedies against the award at the seat of the arbitration and enforcement proceedings. This relationship is governed by Article V(1)(e) of the Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards of 1958 (the New York Convention), which provides that recognition and enforcement of a foreign arbitral award may be refused if the party against whom the award is invoked proves that the award has been suspended or set aside by a competent authority in the country in which, or under the law of which, the award was made.1 Plainly, this provision only deals with the case in which the unsuccessful party in the arbitration obtains, at the seat of the arbitration, a favourable judgment by a court of supervisory jurisdiction.2 There is nothing, in Article VPage 176
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The traditional approach to the relationship between the remedies at the seat and enforcement proceedings and its criticism
12.4 In international arbitration, it is well established that the courts of the State of the seat of the arbitration have supervisory jurisdiction over the award. This supervisory jurisdiction concerns, in particular, the remedies against the award available under national arbitration legislation. These remedies generally comprise an application for setting aside the award on grounds that include, but not necessarily limited to, the grounds for refusing recognition and enforcement of the award under article V(1)(a)–(c) and (2) of the New York Convention.Page 178
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covers a wide spectrum of potential objections to enforcement or recognition, in relation to some of which it might be easier to invoke such discretion as the word ‘may’ contains than it could be in any case where the objection is that there was never any applicable arbitration agreement between the parties to the award.20