Transnational Construction Arbitration
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CHAPTER 4
The rise of arbitral institutions and their role in private dispute resolution
The rise of arbitral institutions and their role in private dispute resolution
Origin of institutions
4.1 There are currently some dozens of arbitral institutions of differing sizes and importance throughout the world, located in virtually every significant commercial centre. Their constitutions vary greatly. Some, such as the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) in Paris are part of a much larger business and commercial organisation. Others, such as the London Court of International Arbitration (LCIA) are substantially autonomous. All arbitration institutions including the ICC, operate from a ‘home’ base where they are subject to the local domestic law in regard to their form and constitution. This may have important consequences as regards financial matters such as (in the case of UK law) acquiring charitable status. Equally, all arbitration institutions operate or aim to operate on an international basis and thus provide what may be important contractual rules to supplement the local law applicable as the procedural law of the arbitration. 4.2 The ICC in Paris, which probably remains the largest and most representative business organisation in the world, was founded in only 1919, with its own distinctive approach to arbitration containing provisions based on French law.1 The founding of the ICC thus occurred in the immediate aftermath of the First World War and in anticipation of a wider movement that embraced the League of Nations and, subsequently, the Geneva Conventions, sharing the common aim of providing an alternative to armed conflict including, crucially, the promotion of international trade. Yet the advent of arbitration institutions predates these developments by a considerable margin. In London, the Corn Trade Association started its operations in 1878, bringing together existing trade groups whose interests included arbitration of disputes. After various reorganisations the modern association known as GAFTA emerged with its own arbitration system geared to that particular trade and involving a number of individual features such as a board of appeal where challenges were dealt with ‘in house’. A similar London-based organisation is the London Maritime Arbitrators Association (LMAA) which, although founded in its modern form only in 1960, claims roots and traditions that stretch back over 300 years when disputes were dealt with before members of the shipbroking fraternity associated with the Baltic Exchange in London. 4.3 Many more such organisations could be cited and it is clear that London in particular has a long history of trade associations promulgating their own rules and procedures for dispute resolution, sometimes peculiar to particular trades, but all embraced within thePage 34
Arbitration in the modern era
4.6 The start of the modern era can conveniently be taken as the end of the Second World War. At this stage, even before the end of the colonial system on which much of world trade was based, it was clear that the idea of promoting international trade as an incentive to peaceful coexistence had not worked, at least in the form attempted in the 1920s and 1930s. The United Nations was established within months of the end of the war and, by 1958, had published what was to become the most far-reaching and influential instrument in the promotion of international arbitration, the New York Convention. Building on the foundations of the Geneva Conventions, the 1958 Convention has substantially succeeded in achieving universal international recognition and enforcement, subject to surprisingly limited exceptions, of both arbitration agreements and awards. Having achieved this goal, the United Nations logically turned its attention to the process of arbitration through the United Nations Commission on International Trade Law (UNCITRAL), established in 1966. In addition to promoting a series of measures for unifying international trade, UNCITRAL published its own Arbitration Rules in 1976 (UNCITRAL Rules),2 significantly at a time when the ICC Rules of Arbitration (ICC Rules) were universally known and in operation.Page 35
- (a) Recalling its resolution … of 17 December 1966 which established the UNCITRAL with the purpose of furthering the progressive harmonisation and unification of the law of International Trade in the interests of all peoples, in particular those of developing countries.
- (b) Also recalling its resolution …. of 15 December 1976 recommending the use of the Arbitration Rules of UNCITRAL.
- (c) Recognising the value of arbitration as a method of settling disputes that may arise in the context of international commercial relations.
- (d) Noting that the Arbitration Rules are recognised as a very successful text and are used in a wide variety of circumstances covering a broad range of disputes including disputes between private commercial parties, investor-state disputes, state to state disputes and commercial disputes administered by arbitral institutions, in all parts of the world.
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Conduct of arbitration
4.12 The extent to which institutional rules affect the form and conduct of arbitrations can hardly be overstated. At the outset, all arbitration rules empower the tribunal to decide, in the absence of the parties’ agreement, (1) the procedural rules to be applied, in addition to any contracted rules, (2) the language and (3) place of the arbitration and (4) the law applicable to the merits. While each of these matters can be of fundamental importance and, in the absence of agreement would otherwise be determined by the court having supervisory jurisdiction, there is clearly merit in having such matters decided by the tribunal itself. At least the empowerment of the tribunal avoids the potential derailment of the arbitration at the outset where there are different potential national courts having supervisory jurisdiction, with the possibility of conflicting decisions.Page 37
- (a) act fairly and impartially as between the parties
- (b) giving each party a reasonable opportunity of putting his case and dealing with that of his opponent.
Fund holding
4.16 One of the significant commercial functions of arbitral institutions is the holding of advanced funds for the payment of arbitrators’ fees and expenses and indeed the institution’s own fees and expenses. The levels of fees requiring to be deposited have always been high and have increased dramatically in recent years with deposits in ICC cases regularly reaching or exceeding US$1 million. From the number of ongoing cases at any point it is not difficult to estimate the total funds that an institution is likely to be holding at any particular time. The question of what the institution does with these funds is a matter of commercial as well as ethical interest both to parties and others involved in arbitration. This was the subject of a somewhat outspoken article contributed by the late Dr J Gillis Wetter to a conference at the Centre of Construction Law at King’s College in 1989 in which he pointed out the level of fees being held by the ICC and relatingPage 38
Arbitrator’s fees
4.18 An important issue in the management of an arbitration is the way in which the arbitral tribunal is to be remunerated. The long-standing tradition of English lawyers and arbitrators has been to charge on a time basis. Even the long-standing tradition of ‘brief fees’ for barristers is loosely based on anticipated preparation time. This has arguably resulted in or at least contributed, over the last two or three decades, to the relentless expansion of commercial arbitrations, which have consequently become longer, more complex and more costly. Tribunals have had little incentive in seeking to curtail the process, especially if being paid for all the time used. It therefore came as a shock to English practitioners, from about 1980 onwards, when undertaking ICC cases as arbitrators, to find that their fees were not only capped, but so structured as to promote speed in bringing the case to a conclusion, with the adoption of greater efficiency in dealing with the case. It is no coincidence that the Arbitration Act 1996 now expressly requires the tribunal to adopt procedures so as to avoid unnecessary delay or expense,11 a requirement that was absent from any earlier arbitration ordinance and not necessarily to be implied therein. 4.19 Now that the obligation to conduct arbitrations efficiently is universal, and such that it hardly requires to be mentioned, it can be noted that arbitration institutions internationally are now divided into two camps – those that follow the ICC example of capping fees, including the Dubai International Arbitration Centre (DIAC) and Singapore International Arbitration Centre (SIAC) and those that continue to operate by payment on the basis of time, notably the LCIA and the American Arbitration Association (AAA). Even here, however, the hourly fee rates are set at a maximum rate somewhat lower than those currently earned for comparable commercial work; so that it can be said that all arbitral institutions seek to incentivise tribunals to achieve efficiency and the adoption of cost-effective measures.Page 39
Terms of reference
4.20 The ICC Rules have, from the outset, required the tribunal to draw up terms of reference setting out a prescribed list of matters identifying the dispute of the parties and the basic framework of the arbitration including a ‘list of issues to be determined’, although the latter is expressed to be optional in the latest version of the rules.12 It is easy to criticise the requirement, especially given that the rules themselves provide a timetable of two months, which in practice can easily become extended, necessarily delaying the effective start of the arbitration. It is also to be observed that the matters to be set out in the terms of reference substantially mirror what is required to have been included in the ‘request for arbitration’ and in the ‘answer to the request’.13 In defence, it may be noted that Article 24 of the ICC Rules now requires the tribunal, when drawing up the terms of reference or as soon as possible thereafter, to convene a case management conference with a view to establishing the procedural timetable for the case; and in practice tribunals will usually combine the two processes so that expensive meeting time is used as productively as possible. 4.21 The origin of the terms of reference is a requirement of French law that formerly (but no longer) required all arbitration agreements to be executed after the dispute in question had arisen. It is curious that a provision peculiar to French law should appear with such prominence in an instrument designed for international use. However, it has been said on many occasions that the terms of reference represent a useful opportunity for the parties and the tribunal to meet and for the arbitral proceedings to be formally ‘launched’ by the combination of the terms of reference and procedural timetable. On this basis, the ICC has steadfastly resisted attempts to make the terms of reference optional. Indeed, it might be observed that, while most arbitral institutions will allow, or even encourage, parties to agree amendments to the procedure, the ICC has a longstanding reputation for not permitting what it regards as any fundamental deviation from the rules, including the provisions for terms of reference as well scrutiny of draft awards by the ICC. 4.22 One of the serious drawbacks of the ICC terms of reference procedure was the fact that, under earlier versions of the ICC Rules, there was a strict embargo on amendments to the case of either party after the terms of reference had been signed. Apart from the obvious inconvenience, this also led to parties introducing amendments after the initial exchange of pleadings and often immediately before the terms of reference meeting, often leading to objection and request for re-pleading by the other party. The rules expressly require that the terms of reference are drawn up ‘in the light of [the parties’] most recent submissions’14 so that the tribunal could not refuse to take late amendments into account. These difficulties have now been substantially overcome by giving the tribunal discretion to admit new claims upon terms, now substantially similar to the ordinary jurisdiction of common law tribunals to allow amendments provided they fall within the tribunal’s jurisdiction. However, it is fair to conclude that the topic of terms of reference has occupied an amount of time and energy out of proportion to their value, and that this has been the result of the ICC’s insistence on maintaining a procedure of questionable value and relevance.Page 40
Challenges to arbitrators
4.24 As noted, the UNCITRAL Rules provide for challenge to arbitrators on the ground that ‘circumstances exist that give rise to justifiable doubts as to the arbitrator’s impartiality or independence’. This wording is followed very closely by the LCIA Arbitration Rules (LCIA Rules)17 and by the ICC Rules,18 although also allowing for challenges on wider grounds, as do other sets of rules. Such grounds of challenge are generally mirrored in legislation, for example, under the English Arbitration Act 199619 or under the Model Law.20 These provisions are generally accompanied by supportive measures requiring (1) that the challenge is brought in a timely manner21 and (2) that other remedies such as those under an arbitral institution are first exhausted.22 The challenge, if not accepted, is to be decided, under the relevant rules, by some representative body of the institution. Under the UNCITRAL Rules the decision is to be made by the ‘appointing authority, either already designated or to be designated’.23 4.25 Thus the grounds and procedure for challenge are well established, including measures found both in the rules and in the governing law to avoid ‘after the event’ challenges that could have been brought earlier. What is an increasing problem, in an era of more frequent challenges to tribunals, is to establish predictable grounds on which challenges are likely to be accepted or rejected by the institutions. This process should be assisted by decisions of the courts. However, in most or many jurisdictions, courtsPage 41
Ethics and conduct of advocates
4.28 As already noted the trends towards regulations have, for various reasons, not yet reached international arbitration. Individual lawyers and other professionals involved in arbitration, notably experts, would generally be subject to individual professional codes of conduct and rules. These may impose serious and enforceable sanctions against individuals. However, there is a major problem in that there are no ‘international’ rules applying to lawyers and individual national codes are known to vary very substantially, both in terms of content and enforcement. There is also another dimension to the problem, in that numbers of individual professionals involved in international arbitration may not be lawyers. In the case of experts, they are likely to be registered with their own professional institution, which, however, is unlikely to provide any specific rules dealing with expert evidence. While there are professional bodies dealing with experts,27Page 42
Scrutiny of awards
4.32 The final step in the arbitration is the drawing up of the award and its delivery to the parties. Institutions invariably require that awards are submitted to them and are then transmitted to the parties by the institution, bearing its imprimatur. This can be useful in checking that the award does not contain patent defects or omissions. However, there is a significant disparity between the practices of different institutions in regard toPage 43
The court may lay down modifications as to the form of the award and, without affecting the arbitral tribunal’s liberty of decision, may also draw its attention to points of substance. No award shall be rendered by the arbitral tribunal until it has been approved by the court as to its form.