AT A CROSSROADS: THE CASE OF `PATHOLOGICAL ARBITRATION CLAUSES` WHICH DETERMINE A JURISDICTIONAL FIGHT

The so-called ‘pathological arbitration clauses’ are ambiguously drafted arbitration agreements which disrupt the setting in motion of an arbitration proceeding. A particular situation is the case where parties refer both to the jurisdiction of the arbitration tribunals and to that of the domestic...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Paul COMȘA
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nicolae Titulescu University Publishing House 2018-05-01
Series:Challenges of the Knowledge Society
Subjects:
Online Access:http://cks.univnt.ro/uploads/cks_2018_articles/index.php?dir=2_private_law%2F&download=CKS_2018_private_law_006.pdf
Description
Summary:The so-called ‘pathological arbitration clauses’ are ambiguously drafted arbitration agreements which disrupt the setting in motion of an arbitration proceeding. A particular situation is the case where parties refer both to the jurisdiction of the arbitration tribunals and to that of the domestic courts in their contracts, without giving further detail. Such agreements may be interpreted in different ways and they currently cause controversy among several theorists and practitioners. However, in recent years the arbitration tribunals strive to maintain the validity of the defective arbitration clauses by preferring an interpretation which gives effect to the clauses over one which does not. Our paper briefly examines this kind of defective arbitration clauses and the solutions provided by doctrinaires and courts. In the end, we assess the issue and attempt to establish the parties’ true intention in order ‘to remedy’ the pathology.
ISSN:2068-7796
2068-7796