Transnational Construction Arbitration
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CHAPTER 11
Recognition and enforcement of domestic and foreign arbitral awards in the Middle East
Recognition and enforcement of domestic and foreign arbitral awards in the Middle East
Introduction
11.1 The present chapter discusses in some detail the practice and procedure of the enforcement of domestic and foreign commercial and investment arbitration awards in the construction sector in the Middle East. It should be noted from the outset that the enforcement of construction arbitration awards is no different from the enforcement of ordinary commercial (or investment) arbitration awards; there is hence no special regime that applies to the enforcement of arbitration awards dealing with construction disputes.1 In terms of geographical coverage, given prevailing constraints of space, the discussion will focus on some of the more prominent arbitration jurisdictions, such as the Gulf countries,2 Lebanon3 and Egypt.4,5 Occasional reference will be made to a jurisdictionPage 140
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Enforcement of domestic arbitral awards25
Domestic ratification processes
11.8 In most Middle Eastern jurisdictions, the recognition and enforcement of domestic arbitral awards takes the form of a so-called ratification or validation process.26 This essentially means that the subject arbitral award is submitted to a full procedural review before the competent court of first instance, which, in turn, is subject to appeal to the competent court of appeal and in a final instance the competent court of cassation. This said, in some of the Gulf countries, in particular Bahrain,27 Oman28 and Saudi,29 ratification proceedings are initiated before the competent court of appeal or equivalent. In Lebanon, a judgment of the court of first instance granting leave to enforce cannot be challenged before the higher courts,30 the only recourse available to an award debtor being an action for nullification.31 Some jurisdictions, including Egypt,32 Kuwait,33 Libya34 and Qatar,35 require the registration of a domestic award with the clerk of the court having original jurisdiction over the underlying dispute for the enforcement process to go ahead. In Egypt more specifically, awards that qualify as of an international commercial nature within the meaning of Articles 2 and 3 of the Egyptian Arbitration Law36 are submitted to the Cairo Court of Appeal for exequatur.37 In Saudi, by virtue of the adoption of the newPage 143
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Applications for nullification and public policy considerations
11.13 Importantly, in response to an application for recognition and enforcement, an award debtor may file for the nullification of the subject award.74 Given that award debtors in the Middle East rarely comply with the terms of an award voluntarily, an application for nullification is routine practice in most Middle Eastern jurisdictions. Typical grounds for nullification include: (1) the invalidity of the underlying arbitration agreement, including insufficient capacity to enter into the arbitration agreement (for example failure to provide a special power of attorney);75 (2) the improper constitution or deficiencies in the mandate of the tribunal (including concerns about the independence and impartiality of tribunal members76); (3) a violation extra petita by the tribunal (ie the tribunal ruling outside the strict boundaries of its mandate77);78 (4) a violation of the content and/or form requirements of the arbitral award79 and in particular failure to render an award within the prescribed statutory time-limit, which varies across jurisdictions and are usually subjectPage 147
marriage, inheritance, and lineage, as well as provisions relating to sovereignty, free trade, distribution of wealth, rules of private ownership and the other rules and foundations upon which society is based, in such a manner as not to conflict with the definitive provisions and fundamental principles of Islamic Sharia’a.