Jurisdiction and arbitration agreements and their enforcement:
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
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London
Sweet & Maxwell
[2015]
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Ausgabe: | Third edition |
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Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | cxiv, 904 Seiten |
ISBN: | 9780414034310 0414034317 |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | Contents
page
Acknowledgments ............................................ v
Foreword ................................................... vii
Dedication ................................................ ix
Preface .................................................... xi
Table of Cases ....................................... xxvii
Table of Statutes ........................................ xcix
Table of Statutory Instruments ............................ cv
Table of European Legislation9 International Conventions,
Treaties and Protocols ................................ cvii
Table of Secondary European Legislation .................. cxi
PARTI
Chapter 1: Introduction para.
A: AGREEMENTS FOR THE RESOLUTION OF DISPUTES IN
INTERNATIONAL LITIGATION AND THE DIFFERENT
GOVERNING REGIMES ....................................... 1.01
B. COMPARATIVE APPROACH ................................. 1.09
C. PARALLEL LITIGATION AND CLASH OF JURISDICTION ... 1.12
D. MULTI-TIER CLAUSES .............................. 1.20
E. MATTERS FALLING OUTSIDE THE SCOPE OF THE
BOOK ................................................ 1.21
Chapter 2: Overview of the European Framework
INTRODUCTION TO CHAPTER ................................. 2.01
A. THE EC TREATY ........................................ 2.07
B. THE BRUSSELS I REGULATION RECAST ................... 2.11
Preamble—general principles ......................... 2.12
Creation of unified rules of jurisdiction and recognition and
enforcement of judgments is essential ............... 2.13
Predictable and certain rules of jurisdiction ......... 2.14
Special rules on jurisdiction to be strictly construed . 2.15
xiii
CONTENTS
Protection of weaker party in identified relationships .*. 2.16
Autonomy of the parties is to be respected ............... 2.17
Avoiding irreconcilable judgments ........................ 2.18
Chapter I—Scope and application ...*...................... 2.19
Chapter II—Jurisdiction ............................... 2.20
General provision regarding lis pendens .............. 2.53
Rules for determining which court is first seised ........ 2.70
Hierarchy of jurisdiction provisions .................. 2.73
Employment Contracts ................................. 2.96
C. THE LUGANO II CONVENTION ................................ 2.99
D. ALLOCATION OF JURISDICTION WITHIN THE
UNITED KINGDOM ...................................... 2.117
Chapter 3: Formal Requirements of Jurisdiction, Arbitration and Mediation
Agreements
INTRODUCTION TO CHAPTER ............................... 3.01
A. JURISDICTION AGREEMENTS UNDER THE BRUSSELS I
REGULATION RECAST AND LUGANO II
CONVENTION ...................................... 3.03
Abolition of requirements as to domicile in Brussels Regulation
Recast .......................................... 3.10
Requirements as to conferring jurisdiction on a court or courts ... 3.12
Agreements for the benefit of one party only ......... 3.18
Disputes that arise in connection with a particular legal
relationship ........................................ 3.19
Unless the agreement is null and void as to its substantive
validity under the law of that Member State ............ 3.20
B. JURISDICTION AGREEMENTS AT COMMON LAW ................... 3.43
C. ARBITRATION AGREEMENTS ............................. 3.48
Provisions of English law ........................... 3.48
New York Convention and the Model Law of 1985 ............ 3.52
Recommendation regarding interpretation of New York
Convention and amendments to Model Law .............. 3.64
Recommendation regarding interpretation of New York
Convention ......................................... 3.65
Amendment to UNCITRAL Model Law on International
Commercial Arbitration ............................ 3.71
D. MEDIATION AGREEMENTS ................................. 3.75
E. JURISDICTION AGREEMENTS UNDER THE
HAGUE CONVENTION .................................... 3.76
xiv
CONTENTS
Chapter 4: The Nature and Construction of Jurisdiction and Arbitration
Agreements and Resolving Potential Conflict between Agreements
INTRODUCTION TO CHAPTER ..................................... 4.01
A. THE NATURE AND DIFFERENT TYPES OF JURISDICTION
AGREEMENTS .......................................... 4.02
Exclusive and non-exclusive jurisdiction agreements and their
nature ................................................ 4.02
The nature of a jurisdiction agreement under the Brussels I
Regulation Recast ..................................... 4.06
Construction of jurisdiction agreements as exclusive, non-exclusive
or hybrid .....,............................................ 4.10
B. THE NATURE AND DIFFERENT TYPES OF ARBITRATION
AGREEMENTS .............................................. 4.17
Defining characteristics of an arbitration agreement ..... 4.18
Nature of an agreement to arbitrate and its operation .... 4.24
No particular words are required to agree to submit to
arbitration ............................................. 4.28
Institutional arbitration ............................ 4.29
Ad hoc arbitration ..................................... 4.30
Asymmetrical or one-sided agreements and options ......... 4.31
Scott v Avery clauses ................................... 4.32
Identification of Seat ................................. 4.33
Multi-tier clauses ..................................... 4.34
C. SEPARABILITY ............................................ 4.36
Arbitration agreements ................................... 4.36
Jurisdiction agreements at common law .................. 4.44
Brussels I Regulation Recast ............................. 4.49
Hague Convention on choice of court agreements ........... 4.50
D. CONSTRUCTION AND SCOPE .................................. 4.51
Presumed intention of parties in a one contract case ..... 4.51
Disputes under a series of contracts with differing dispute
resolution provisions ................................... 4.58
Disputes or differences as the construction of or under the contract 4.61
Where one contract replaces or relates to another and
settlement agreements ................................... 4.62
Set-off and counterclaims ................................ 4.64
Consequences of disputes falling outside the scope ..... 4.68
Characterisation of claims ............................. 4.69
E. RESOLVING POTENTIAL CONFLICT OR POTENTIAL
AMBIGUITY IN ARBITRATION AND COURT JURISDICTION
AGREEMENTS .............................................. 4.71
Multiple party disputes—parallel arbitration agreements .. 4.71
Resolving potential ambiguity in dispute resolution
agreements .............................................. 4.77
xv
CONTENTS
Non-existent or poorly defined institutions ........ 4.86
F. DISCHARGE OF ARBITRATION OR JURISDICTION
AGREEMENT ........................................ 4.87
G. ARBITRATION AGREEMENT AND THE HUMAN RIGHTS
ACT .......................................... 4.89
Chapter 5: Incorporation of Jurisdiction and Arbitration Agreements
INTRODUCTION TO CHAPTER ............................ 5.01
A. INCORPORATION OF INDUSTRY-STANDARD TERMS .......... 5.04
B. INCORPORATION OF A JURISDICTION OR ARBITRATION
AGREEMENT FROM ONE CONTRACT INTO
ANOTHER ........................................ 5.13
Incorporation of terms as between two parties from prior
contracts ........................................ 5.25
Is the dispute resolution agreement aptly worded to permit
incorporation? ............................. 5.26
Identification of terms to be incorporated ......... 5.27
Incorporated contract not concluded at date of subject
contract ....................................... 5.31
Clash between express terms and incorporated terms . 5.32
C. INCORPORATION OF ONE PARTY’S STANDARD TERMS
AND CONDITIONS ................................... 5.33
Standard terms incorporated by reference into contract in
writing .......................................... 5.37
Post-contractual reference to standard terms ....... 5.41
Course of dealing .............................. 5.43
Trade usage ...................................... 5.45
Battle of forms .................................. 5.46
Chapter 6: Choice of Law and Dispute Resolution Agreements
INTRODUCTION TO CHAPTER .......................... 6.01
A. IDENTIFICATION OF THE DIFFERENT APPLICABLE LAWS
IN PROBLEMS CONCERNING DISPUTE RESOLUTION
AGREEMENTS AND THEIR ENFORCEMENT ................. 6.02
B. THE RELEVANCE OF A JURISDICTION OR ARBITRATION
AGREEMENT IN DETERMINING THE GOVERNING
SUBSTANTIVE LAW IN THE ABSENCE OF EXPRESS
CHOICE ..................................... 6.13
Jurisdiction agreements .......................... 6.17
Arbitration agreements ........................... 6.22
C. THE PRINCIPLES WHICH DETERMINE THE LAW
xvi
CONTENTS
GOVERNING A JURISDICTION OR ARBITRATION
AGREEMENT ................................................ 6.27
Common law principles applicable to both jurisdiction and
arbitration agreements ............................ 6.29
D. ARBITRATION, THE PROCEDURAL LAW AND CHOICE
OF SEAT ....................................... 6.37
E. MATTERS DETERMINED BY THE GOVERNING LAW ................... 6.43
Matters determined by the governing substantive law ........ 6.44
Matters determined by the governing law of the dispute
resolution agreement ............................ 6.52
Matters determined by the law governing the arbitration
reference ................................... 6.57
F. DISPUTE RESOLUTION AGREEMENTS AND SO-CALLED
FLOATING PROPER LAWS .............................. 6.58
G. THE MEANING OF A SYSTEM OF LAWS IN THE CONTEXT
OF DISPUTE RESOLUTION AGREEMENTS .................. 6.63
Arbitration agreements ............................ 6.64
Jurisdiction agreements and governing substantive disputes . 6.67
Chapter 7: Parties to the Dispute Resolution Agreements; Who is Bound
and Who can Enforce?
INTRODUCTION TO CHAPTER ............................... 7.01
A. ASSIGNMENT/DIRECT ACTION AND SUBROGATION ......... 7.04
Arbitration agreement .............................. 7.08
Direct actions .................................... 7.14
Exclusive jurisdiction agreement at common law ............. 7.15
Article 25 of the Brussels I Regulation Recast and Lugano II
Convention ........................................ 7.19
B. STATUTORY TRANSFER, UNIVERSAL SUCCESSION AND
NOVATION .......................................... 7.26
Statutory transfer ................................ 7.26
Universal succession ............................ 7.30
Novation ......................................... 7.31
C. CONTRACT (RIGHTS OF THIRD PARTIES) ACT 1999 ............... 7.32
Arbitration agreements .............................. 7.33
Jurisdiction agreements at common law ............... 7.35
Article 23 of the Brussels I Regulation Recast and Lugano II
Convention .................................... 7.36
Exclusion or limitation of liability and Himalaya clauses .. 7.38
D. NON-SIGNATORY AND ADDITIONAL PARTIES ........... 7.42
E. FRAUD AND PIERCING CORPORATE VEIL ............ 7.52
F. MISNOMER OF NAMED PARTY .......................... 7.57
G. MULTI-PARTY CONTRACTS .............................. 7.61
H. JOINDER ...................................... 7.63
xvii
CONTENTS
I. CLASS ACTION IN ARBITRATION ................... 7.66
Chapter 8: Relationship with International Convention
INTRODUCTION TO CHAPTER .......................... 8.01
A. DEROGATION FROM PROVISIONS OF INTERNATIONAL
CONVENTION OR STATUTE ........................ 8.02
Carriage of goods by sea ........................ 8.03
International carriage of cargo, passengers and baggage by air .... 8.13
CMR Convention of the International Carriage of Goods by
Road ........................................... 8.19
B. INTERPLAY OF THE BRUSSELS I REGULATION RECAST AND
SPECIALISED INTERNATIONAL CONVENTION ......... 8.27
C. INTERPLAY BETWEEN THE HAGUE CONVENTION
AND OTHER RELATED INTERNATIONAL
INSTRUMENTS .................................. 8.40
PART II
Chapter 9: Commencement of Proceedings or Arbitration and Service out of
the Jurisdiction
INTRODUCTION TO CHAPTER ......................... 9.01
A. COMMENCEMENT OF PROCEEDINGS IN COURT ......... 9.02
B. SERVICE OF PROCEEDINGS WITHIN THE JURISDICTION
OR BY THE CONTRACTUALLY AGREED METHOD ......... 9.03
C. SERVICE OF PROCEEDINGS OUTSIDE THE JURISDICTION
UNDER THE BRUSSELS I REGULATION RECAST OR
LUGANO II CONVENTION WITHOUT PERMISSION ...... 9.04
D. OBTAINING PERMISSION TO SERVE A CLAIM FORM
OUTSIDE OF THE JURISDICTION (CASES FALLING
OUTSIDE THE BRUSSELS I REGULATION RECAST
AND LUGANO II CONVENTION) .................... 9.11
Jurisdiction gateway ........................... 9.14
Serious issue to be tried on the merits ........ 9.20
England and Wales is the appropriate forum for the trial of the
action ....................................... 9.21
Service of claim form .......................... 9.22
E. COMMENCEMENT OF ARBITRATION AND CONSTITUTING
THE TRIBUNAL ................................. 9.23
Commencement of arbitration .................... 9.23
Commencement and time-limits ................... 9.27
Extension of time for commencement of arbitration or dispute
resolution procedures ........................ 9.29
Number and appointment of arbitrators .......... 9.33
xviii
CONTENTS
Chapter 10: Stay and Declining Jurisdiction (Jurisdiction Agreements)
INTRODUCTION TO CHAPTER ............................... 10.01
A. EXCLUSIVE JURISDICTION AGREEMENTS AT COMiMON
LAW ................................................. 10.03
Effective of express agreement that chosen forum is forum
conveniens ...................................... 10.14
Strong cause to override parties5 bargain ............. 10.15
Time-bar ............................................ 10.16
Multiplicity of proceedings and lis alibi pendens ...... 10.17
Real risk of injustice in the chosen court ............. 10.29
No available relief in English court or absence of compulsory
application of foreign law .......................... 10.30
No defence to claim and no genuine desire for trial in chosen
court ............................................... 10.31
Re-litigation of issues in stay application .......... 10.32
Submission to foreign court or delay in seeking stay ... 10.34
B. NON-EXCLUSIVE JURISDICTION AGREEMENTS AT
COMMON LAW ........................................ 10.35
C. INHERENT JURISDICTION OF THE COURT TO CONTROL
THE ORDER OF PARALLEL LITIGATION .................. 10.37
D. EXCLUSIVE JURISDICTION AGREEMENTS UNDER THE
HAGUE CONVENTION ............................... 10.38
E. THE BRUSSELS I REGULATION RECAST AND LUGANO II
CONVENTION ........................................ 10.47
The principles relating to acceptance of jurisdiction under
art.25 under the Brussels I Regulation Recast ........ 10.48
Proceedings brought in a Member State Court other than the
chosen court ...................................... 10.58
Proceedings brought in a Member State Court in breach of a
choice of court agreement in favour of a third state (non EU) 10.64
Proceedings in a Member State Court and lis pendens in a third
state ............................................... 10.78
Lugano II Convention governing principles ............. 10.82
F. PROCEDURE—APPLICATION TO STAY OR CHALLENGE
TO JURISDICTION ..................................... 10.86
Disputed jurisdiction —service out of the jurisdiction with
permission ........................................ 10.86
Court orders on disposal of application ............... 10.89
Submission to jurisdiction .......................... 10.91
Application for stay of proceedings ................... 10.92
Brussels I Regulation Recast—challenge to jurisdiction . 10.94
xix
CONTENTS
Chapter 11: Stay (Arbitration Agreements)
INTRODUCTION TO CHAPTER ...................................... 11.01
A. APPLICATION FOR STAY UNDER S.9 OF THE ARBITRATION
ACT 1996 ............................................. 11.04
Section 9(1) ........................................... 11.07
Section 9(2): An application may be made notwithstanding the
need to exhaust other dispute resolution procedures prior to
arbitration .......................................... 11.38
Section 9(3): Limitations on the bringing of an application . 11.42
Section 9(4): “the court shall grant a stay unless satisfied that the
arbitration agreement is null and void, inoperative, or incapable
of being performed” .............................. 11.45
Null and void .......................................... 11.48
Inoperative ........................................... 11.50
Incapable of being performed ................................ 11.52
Section 9(5): Scott v Avery clauses .................... 11.53
B. INTERFACE OF STAY APPLICATIONS AND THE BRUSSELS
I REGULATION RECAST .................................. 11.55
C. APPLICATIONS FOR STAY UNDER THE ARBITRATION
(INTERNATIONAL INVESTMENTS DISPUTES) ACT
1966 ................................................. 11.60
D. COURT’S INHERENT JURISDICTION TO STAY
PROCEEDINGS AND CASE MANAGEMENT OF
PARALLEL OR RELATED COURT AND ARBITRAL
PROCEEDINGS .......................................... 11.61
Chapter 12: Restraining Injunctions and Orders
INTRODUCTION TO CHAPTER ................................. 12.01
A. EARLY HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF PRINCIPLE .... 12.07
B. MODERN DEVELOPMENT AND PRINCIPLE ..................... 12.18
Summary of principles applicable to alternative forum cases . 12.27
Summary of principles applicable to single forum cases . 12.28
C. ANTI-SUIT INJUNCTIONS AND INVASION OF A LEGAL
RIGHT NOT TO BE SUED ................................. 12.30
D. ANTI-SUIT INJUNCTION AND NON-EXCLUSIVE
JURISDICTION AGREEMENTS .............................. 12.40
E. THE BRUSSELS I REGULATION RECAST AND LUGANO
II CONVENTION ........................................ 12.51
Turner v Grovit ...................................... 12.51
Application to art.25 agreements ....................... 12.58
Limits of prohibition .................................. 12.59
F. THE BRUSSELS I REGULATION AND INJUNCTIONS
TO RESTRAIN BREACH OF AN ARBITRATION
xx
CONTENTS
AGREEMENT .......................................... 12.61
Anti-suit injunctions and the Brussels I Regulation Recast in relation
to arbitration ................................... 12.77
G. ANTI-SUIT INJUNCTIONS AND OBSERVATIONS ON
COMITY ............................................... 12.79
H. THE HAGUE CONVENTION .................................. 12.83
I. RESTRAINT OF ARBITRATION BY INJUNCTION ...................... 12.84
Injunction in support of legal or equitable right not to
have claims brought in arbitration .............. 12.85
Attempts to restrain arbitration on grounds of vexation or
oppression .......................................... 12.87
J. VEXATION AND OPPRESSION AND PARTICULAR
FORMS OF INJUNCTION .................................. 12.95
Restraining enforcement of foreign judgment ............ 12.96
Restraint of re-litigation or attempts to set aside an award . 12.99
Mandatory injunction to discontinue and not
re-commence ........................................ 12.103
Restraint of assignees/subrogated claimants ........... 12.104
Restraint of foreign disclosure proceedings or deposition
taking ......................................... 12.105
Anti-anti-suit injunction ......................... 12.109
Restraint of third-party proceedings ................ 12.112
Injunction to restrain third parties from assisting breach of
jurisdiction/arbitration agreement ............. 12.113
Restraint of breach of privacy obligation in arbitration ..... 12.114
Injunctions against States .......................... 12.117
Anti-suit injunctions and Human Rights Act .......... 12.118
K. INTERIM INJUNCTIONS, THRESHOLD TEST ON
MERITS AND AMERICAN CYANAMID ........................ 12.120
L. DO THE FOREIGN PROCEEDINGS IN QUESTION AMOUNT
TO A BREACH OR MERIT INJUNCTIVE RELIEF? ............. 12.125
Statutory causes of action only available in the foreign
court .............................................. 12.126
Security proceedings .................................. 12.128
Foreign discovery proceedings ....................... 12.129
M. WHEN TO APPLY ........................................ 12.130
N. APPLYING FOR AN INTERIM INJUNCTION ................... 12.133
Statutory jurisdiction .............................. 12.133
Without notice application before commencement of
action ............................................. 12.137
On notice application after commencement of
proceedings ........................................ 12.145
Arbitration claim form and application for interim
injunction ......................................... 12.146
O. ARBITRATORS AND INTERIM MEASURES OF
xxi
CONTENTS
PROTECTION ............................................ 12T49
Introduction ............................................ 12.149
Tribunal’s jurisdiction to make such orders ................ 12.152
Justification for the grant of anti-suit-type orders in
international arbitration ........................... 12.159
Provisional measures in investment treaty arbitrations .. 12.161
Principles applied by international arbitral Tribunals
outside investment treaty cases ..................... 12.167
P. COMPARATIVE REVIEW ..................................... 12.171
Chapter 13: Declaratory Relief and Challenges to Arbitrator’s Ruling on
Jurisdiction
INTRODUCTION TO CHAPTER ................................... 13.01
A. THE GRANT OF DECLARATORY RELIEF IN COURT
WITH REGARD TO JURISDICTION AGREEMENTS ................ 13.02
Affirmative declaratory relief regarding jurisdiction
agreement .......................................... 13.04
Negative declaratory relief ............................. 13.05
A claim for a declaration that no contract exists, where if the
contract was found to exist it would contain an English
law or court jurisdiction ........................... 13.09
Claims for declaratory relief in the context of the Brussels I
Regulation Recast and Lugano II Convention .......... 13.10
B. DECLARATORY ACTION AND ARBITRATION
AGREEMENTS ........................................... 13.13
An affirmative declaration from the court as to the substantive
jurisdiction of the arbitral Tribunal ................ 13.14
A declaration that the parties are obliged to arbitrate and not
litigate their disputes ............................. 13.31
Declaratory relief, that no valid arbitration agreement has been
concluded .......................................... 13.32
C. ARBITRATOR’S RULING ON JURISDICTION AND
CHALLENGE TO AWARD ON JURISDICTION ..................... 13.38
Arbitrator’s ruling on jurisdiction ..................... 13.39
Challenge to arbitrators ruling on jurisdiction and loss of right
of challenge ......................................... 13.46
Loss of right to object to jurisdiction ................. 13.54
Chapter 14: Damages
INTRODUCTION TO CHAPTER .................................. 14.01
A. PRINCIPLES GOVERNING CLAIMS FOR DAMAGES ................. 14.02
Costs ................................................ 14.05
Damages other than costs ................................. 14.13
xxii
CONTENTS
Third parties and inducement ........................... 14.17
Damages in favour of third parties under Contracts (Rights
of Third Parties) Act 1999 ............... 14.18
B. ISSUES ARISING UNDER THE BRUSSELS I REGULATION
RECAST AND LUGANO II CONVENTION ...................... 14.19
Chapter 15: Enforcement of Judgments, Injunctions and Orders
INTRODUCTION TO CHAPTER .................................. 15.01
A. DECLARATORY JUDGMENTS IN THE ENGLISH
COURTS ........................................ 15.03
Issue estoppel .................................. 15.03
Defences to issue estoppel ........................ 15.16
Brussels I Regulation Recast .................... 15.17
B. FOREIGN JUDGMENTS FROM THE COURTS OF NON-
MEMBER STATES ................................. 15.28
Administration of Justice Act 1920 ................ 15.30
Public policy ..................................... 15.31
Foreign Judgments (Reciprocal Enforcement) Act 1933 .... 15.32
Common law action on foreign judgment .................. 15.34
Res judicata ...................................... 15.38
Statutory control of re-litigation under s.34 of the Civil
Jurisdiction and Judgments Act 1982 ........... 15.42
Statutory control of overseas judgments brought in breach of
agreement for the settlement of disputes ............ 15.44
C. JUDGMENTS OF MEMBER STATE AND LUGANO
CONTRACTING STATE COURTS ........................ 15.53
Judgment given in breach of an art.25 agreement ........ 15.54
Judgment given in breach of an arbitration agreement . 15.59
Judgment on merits given in breach of an arbitration agreement ... 15.56
D. HAGUE CONVENTION ON EXCLUSIVE CHOICE OF
COURT AGREEMENTS .............................. 15.59
E. ANTI-SUIT INJUNCTIONS ............................ 15.66
Enforcement in the English courts ............... 15.67
Brussels I Regulation Recast and Lugano II Convention .. 15.74
Enforcement and recognition in civil law systems ....... 15.75
Chapter 16: Enforcement of Awards and Arbitrators Orders
INTRODUCTION TO CHAPTER ............................. 16.01
A. ENFORCEMENT OF AWARDS MADE IN THE
JURSDICTION OR OUTSIDE OF THE NEW YORK
CONVENTION .................................... 16.05
xxiii
CONTENTS
Enforcement of Declaratory Awards made in England ... 16.05
Enforcement of substantive awards in England ......... 16.13
B. CHALLENGES TO ENFORCEMENT OF AWARDS IN
ENGLAND .......................................... 16.21
Substantive jurisdiction ...................... 16.22
Serious irregularity ................................ 16.23
Tribunal or arbitral institution exceeding its powers or
admitted irregularity in conduct of proceedings .... 16.39
Appeal on a question of law .................... 16.52
C. ENFORCEMENT OF NEW YORK CONVENTION
AWARDS ............................................. 16.57
General approach to enforcement of New York Convention
awards ............................................. 16.62
Incapacity of a party to the arbitration agreement .. 16.68
Invalidity of arbitration agreement ............... 16.72
Improper notice of appointment of arbitrator or otherwise
unable to present case ............................. 16.75
Award beyond the scope of submission ................ 16.77
Irregularity in the composition of the arbitral tribunal or
failure to conduct arbitration in accordance with the
applicable arbitral procedure .................. 16.78
Award not yet binding, or has been set aside, or suspended
by a competent authority of the country in which or under
the law of which the award was made ................ 16.80
Award in respect of a matter not capable of settlement by
Arbitration .................................... 16.84
Contrary to public policy ........................... 16.85
D. ENFORCEMENT OF ARBITRATOR’S ORDERS ................. 16.87
Enforcement before the Tribunal ..................... 16.88
Enforcement in the courts ........................... 16.92
Chapter 17: International Arbitration Against States
INTRODUCTION TO CHAPTER ............................. 17.01
A. PRIVATE LAW ARBITRATION AGREEMENTS WITH
STATES ............................................. 17.03
General legal framework for State immunity .......... 17.03
Arbitration agreements, State immunity and court
proceedings ...................................... 17.07
B. ENFORCEMENT OF AN AWARD AGAINST A STATE
UNDER THE NEW YORK CONVENTION ...................... 17.13
C. INVESTMENT TREATY ARBITRATION
AGREEMENTS AND DISPUTE RESOLUTION
PROVISIONS ....................................... 17.21
XXIV
CONTENTS
Investment treaties and agreements to arbitrate disputes
with investors ........................................... 17.21
Governing law of the agreement to arbitrate .................. 17.31
Rules on treaty interpretation and application to treaty
arbitration agreements ................................... 17.33
Protection of an award under bilateral investment treaties ... 17.35
Disputes as to whether an investor can only arbitrate
questions of quantum or liability and quantum ............ 17.40
Incorporation of dispute resolution provisions from other
treaties by reference to most favoured nation provisions . 17.42
Fork-in-the-road ........................................ 17.52
Does the existence of an underlying investment contract
with an exclusive jurisdiction clause oust the jurisdiction of
the investment treaty tribunal to consider similarly based
investment treaty claims against the State? ........ 17.55
Does the investment treaty tribunal have jurisdiction to
determine breach of contract claims? ..................... 17.58
Can an umbrella clause elevate pure contract claims into
BIT claims? .............................................. 17.60
Admissibility of claims for breach of an umbrella clause
in the light of exclusive jurisdiction provisions in underlying
private law contract ........................... 17.65
Chapter 18: The Enforcement of Multi-tier Clauses and Provision for
Alternative Dispute Resolution
INTRODUCTION TO CHAPTER ................................. 18.01
A. ENFORCEMENT BY COURTS OF ADR PROVISION ...................... 18.05
B. ARBITRATION AND MULTI-TIER CLAUSES ..................... 18.13
C. ENFORCEMENT BY ARBITRATORS ............................. 18.15
D. EU DIRECTIVE ON MEDIATION IN CIVIL AND
COMMERCIAL MATTERS .................................... 18.17
APPENDICES Page
APPENDIX A
Regulation (EU) No 12/15/2012 of the European Parliament
and of the Council ...................................... 659
APPENDIX B
Brussels Regulations to the Brussels I Regulations Recast Showing
Changes ................................................... 707
appendix c
Recommended Interpretation of New York Convention ....... 758
XXV
CONTENTS
APPENDIX D
UNCITRAL Model Law on International Commercial
Arbitration 1985 ................................... 762
APPENDIX E
Hague Convention on Choice of Court Agreements ........... 791
APPENDIX F
German Model Treaty 2008 ................................. 806
APPENDIX G
Agreement on encouragement and reciprocal protection of
investments between the Kingdom of the Netherlands and
the Argentine Republic ............................. 814
APPENDIX H
ASEAN Comprehensive Investment Agreement ............. 816
APPENDIX I
Supreme Court Act 1981 ............................... 818
APPENDIX J
Arbitration (International Investment Disputes) Act 1966 .. 829
APPENDIX K
Lugano II Convention ............................... 834
Index .............................................. 881
xxvi
|
any_adam_object | 1 |
author | Joseph, David 1961- |
author_GND | (DE-588)1081332441 |
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discipline | Rechtswissenschaft |
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format | Book |
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id | DE-604.BV043634368 |
illustrated | Not Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-10T07:31:06Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9780414034310 0414034317 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-029048328 |
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physical | cxiv, 904 Seiten |
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publishDateSearch | 2015 |
publishDateSort | 2015 |
publisher | Sweet & Maxwell |
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spelling | Joseph, David 1961- Verfasser (DE-588)1081332441 aut Jurisdiction and arbitration agreements and their enforcement by David Joseph Q.C. Third edition London Sweet & Maxwell [2015] cxiv, 904 Seiten txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Arbitration and award / England Arbitration agreements, Commercial / England Conflict of laws / Arbitration and award Handelsrecht gnd Schiedsrichterliches Verfahren gnd Schiedsrichterliches Verfahren (DE-588)4121615-5 gnd rswk-swf Handelsrecht (DE-588)4023249-9 gnd rswk-swf Großbritannien gnd Großbritannien (DE-588)4022153-2 gnd rswk-swf Großbritannien (DE-588)4022153-2 g Handelsrecht (DE-588)4023249-9 s Schiedsrichterliches Verfahren (DE-588)4121615-5 s 1\p DE-604 Digitalisierung UB Passau - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=029048328&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis 1\p cgwrk 20201028 DE-101 https://d-nb.info/provenance/plan#cgwrk |
spellingShingle | Joseph, David 1961- Jurisdiction and arbitration agreements and their enforcement Arbitration and award / England Arbitration agreements, Commercial / England Conflict of laws / Arbitration and award Handelsrecht gnd Schiedsrichterliches Verfahren gnd Schiedsrichterliches Verfahren (DE-588)4121615-5 gnd Handelsrecht (DE-588)4023249-9 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4121615-5 (DE-588)4023249-9 (DE-588)4022153-2 |
title | Jurisdiction and arbitration agreements and their enforcement |
title_auth | Jurisdiction and arbitration agreements and their enforcement |
title_exact_search | Jurisdiction and arbitration agreements and their enforcement |
title_full | Jurisdiction and arbitration agreements and their enforcement by David Joseph Q.C. |
title_fullStr | Jurisdiction and arbitration agreements and their enforcement by David Joseph Q.C. |
title_full_unstemmed | Jurisdiction and arbitration agreements and their enforcement by David Joseph Q.C. |
title_short | Jurisdiction and arbitration agreements and their enforcement |
title_sort | jurisdiction and arbitration agreements and their enforcement |
topic | Arbitration and award / England Arbitration agreements, Commercial / England Conflict of laws / Arbitration and award Handelsrecht gnd Schiedsrichterliches Verfahren gnd Schiedsrichterliches Verfahren (DE-588)4121615-5 gnd Handelsrecht (DE-588)4023249-9 gnd |
topic_facet | Arbitration and award / England Arbitration agreements, Commercial / England Conflict of laws / Arbitration and award Handelsrecht Schiedsrichterliches Verfahren Großbritannien |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=029048328&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT josephdavid jurisdictionandarbitrationagreementsandtheirenforcement |