Enforcing Foreign Arbitral Awards against Non-Signatories: A Plea for Strict Scrutiny

Many American cases have discussed the circumstances under which a non-signatory to an arbitration agreement, ie a person who is not ex-facie a party to the agreement, can be compelled to submit to arbitration or can compel another party to submit to arbitration instead of litigating in the courts....

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Main Author: PULLE, Austin Ignatius
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Language:English
Published: Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University 2008
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Online Access:https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sol_research/816
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spelling sg-smu-ink.sol_research-18152010-09-21T08:36:04Z Enforcing Foreign Arbitral Awards against Non-Signatories: A Plea for Strict Scrutiny PULLE, Austin Ignatius Many American cases have discussed the circumstances under which a non-signatory to an arbitration agreement, ie a person who is not ex-facie a party to the agreement, can be compelled to submit to arbitration or can compel another party to submit to arbitration instead of litigating in the courts. In contrast, the number of cases that discuss the conditions necessary fir a foreign award to be enforced against a non-signatory are relatively few. The number and complexity of cross border transactions have increased because of ti ie pace of globalisation, and many of these transactions envisage arbitration as the method of dispute settlement. When a foreign arbitral tribunal makes an award against a non-signatory, the court before which enforcement of that award is sought must determine whether the award is a New York Convention award. More than 140 countries are parties to this Convention, and while the local conflicts of law rules in many of these countries permit courts to ignore the judgments of the most respected courts in the world, the Convention requires enforcement of awards from any duly constituted foreign arbitral panel. A decision of the High Court of Singapore allowing the enforcement of a foreign award against a non- signatory affords an opportunity to examine the law and policy on the issue and their significance for Asian courts. The argument of the article is that foreign awards against non-signatories should be carefully scrutinised. The enforcing court must satisfy itself that the non-signatory should be treated as a party to the arbitration agreement and the persuasive burden of proof should be on the enforcing party. 2008-01-01T08:00:00Z text https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sol_research/816 Research Collection Yong Pung How School Of Law eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University Arbitration Non-Signatories New York Convention International Arbitration Act Dispute Resolution and Arbitration
institution Singapore Management University
building SMU Libraries
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider SMU Libraries
collection InK@SMU
language English
topic Arbitration
Non-Signatories
New York Convention
International Arbitration Act
Dispute Resolution and Arbitration
spellingShingle Arbitration
Non-Signatories
New York Convention
International Arbitration Act
Dispute Resolution and Arbitration
PULLE, Austin Ignatius
Enforcing Foreign Arbitral Awards against Non-Signatories: A Plea for Strict Scrutiny
description Many American cases have discussed the circumstances under which a non-signatory to an arbitration agreement, ie a person who is not ex-facie a party to the agreement, can be compelled to submit to arbitration or can compel another party to submit to arbitration instead of litigating in the courts. In contrast, the number of cases that discuss the conditions necessary fir a foreign award to be enforced against a non-signatory are relatively few. The number and complexity of cross border transactions have increased because of ti ie pace of globalisation, and many of these transactions envisage arbitration as the method of dispute settlement. When a foreign arbitral tribunal makes an award against a non-signatory, the court before which enforcement of that award is sought must determine whether the award is a New York Convention award. More than 140 countries are parties to this Convention, and while the local conflicts of law rules in many of these countries permit courts to ignore the judgments of the most respected courts in the world, the Convention requires enforcement of awards from any duly constituted foreign arbitral panel. A decision of the High Court of Singapore allowing the enforcement of a foreign award against a non- signatory affords an opportunity to examine the law and policy on the issue and their significance for Asian courts. The argument of the article is that foreign awards against non-signatories should be carefully scrutinised. The enforcing court must satisfy itself that the non-signatory should be treated as a party to the arbitration agreement and the persuasive burden of proof should be on the enforcing party.
format text
author PULLE, Austin Ignatius
author_facet PULLE, Austin Ignatius
author_sort PULLE, Austin Ignatius
title Enforcing Foreign Arbitral Awards against Non-Signatories: A Plea for Strict Scrutiny
title_short Enforcing Foreign Arbitral Awards against Non-Signatories: A Plea for Strict Scrutiny
title_full Enforcing Foreign Arbitral Awards against Non-Signatories: A Plea for Strict Scrutiny
title_fullStr Enforcing Foreign Arbitral Awards against Non-Signatories: A Plea for Strict Scrutiny
title_full_unstemmed Enforcing Foreign Arbitral Awards against Non-Signatories: A Plea for Strict Scrutiny
title_sort enforcing foreign arbitral awards against non-signatories: a plea for strict scrutiny
publisher Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University
publishDate 2008
url https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sol_research/816
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