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Oxford Law Citator
Contents
Expand All
Collapse All
Preliminary Material
General Editor’s Preface
Preface
Citations
Contents
Tables of Cases
Table of Commercial Cases
Court Decisions
Australia
Bermuda
Canada
Egypt
England
France
Germany
Greece
Hong Kong
India
Italy
Morocco
Netherlands
New Zealand
Singapore
Spain
Sweden
Switzerland
Tunisia
United States
Arbitral awards
Table of Investment Cases
Table of Cases of International Courts and Tribunals
Table of Legislation
International Conventions and Instruments
European Union
Arbitration Rules
National Laws
Austria
Australia
Belgium
Brazil
China
Colombia
Egypt
England
France
Germany
Greece
Hong Kong
India
Iran
Italy
Lebanon
Mexico
Netherlands
New Zealand
Poland
Portugal
Saudi Arabia
Senegal
Spain
Sri Lanka
Sweden
Switzerland
Tunisia
United States
Venezuela
National Investment Laws
Albania
Botswana
Cameroon
Canada
Central African Republic
Côte d’ Ivoire
Democratic Republic of Congo
Egypt
El Salvador
Georgia
Mali
Mozambique
Papua New Guinea
Somalia
Tanzania
Togo
Tunisia
Uganda
Venezuela
Zaire
Investment Treaties
Multilateral Investment Treaties
Bilateral Investment Treaties
List of abbreviations
Institutions, Organizations, and Rules
General Abbreviations
Main Text
1 Introduction
Preliminary Material
1.01
A The Issue
1.02
1.03
1.04
1 Party autonomy, arbitration agreement
1.05
1.06
1.07
2 The evolution of arbitration
1.08
1.09
1.10
1.11
3 Commercial arbitration
1.12
1.13
4 Investment arbitration
1.14
1.15
1.16
1.17
B Scope of the Book
1.18
1.19
1.20
1.21
1.22
1.23
C Structure of the Book
1.24
1.25
1.26
1.27
1.28
1.29
1.30
Part I The Consensual Nature of Arbitration
Preliminary Material
2 The Evolution of Arbitration and its Consensual Nature
Preliminary Material
2.01
2.02
A The Classical Characterization of Arbitration
2.03
1 Party autonomy as the primary source of the arbitration jurisdiction
2.04
2.05
2.06
2.07
2 The elements of the classical characterization of the concept of arbitration
2.08
2.1 A private mechanism for dispute resolution
2.09
2.2 The consensual nature of arbitration
2.10
2.11
2.12
2.3 An alternative to national courts
2.13
2.14
2.4 The final and binding determination of parties’ rights and obligations
2.15
2.16
3 The discontent with the classical characterization of arbitration, in particular with its consensual nature
2.17
2.18
2.19
1
2
3
4
5
B The Historical Evolution of the Concept and the Consensual Nature of Arbitration
2.20
2.21
2.22
1 The traditional concept of arbitration
2.23
2.24
2.25
2.26
2.27
2 The modern concept of arbitration
2.28
2.29
2.30
2.31
2.32
2.33
2.34
2.35
2.36
2.37
3 Expansion of arbitration into new fields: increasing acceptance of arbitration, but perceived reduction of its consensual nature
2.38
2.39
2.40
3.1 Arbitration with a reduced consensual character
2.41
Arbitration with forced consent
2.42
2.43
2.44
2.45
2.46
2.47
Mandatory arbitration
2.48
2.49
2.50
2.51
2.52
3.2 Investment arbitration
2.53
2.54
2.55
2.56
2.57
2.58
2.59
2.60
C The Framework of Instruments Where Acceptance of the Use of Arbitration as a Dispute Resolution Mechanism is Embedded
2.61
1 International conventions and investment treaties
2.62
2.63
2.64
2.65
2.66
2.67
2.68
2.69
2.70
2.71
2 National laws
2.72
2.73
3 The social context
2.74
2.75
2.76
2.77
3 Capacity, Restrictions, and Limitations to Consent to Arbitration
Preliminary Material
3.01
3.02
A Capacity to Consent to Arbitration
3.03
3.04
1 Capacity to enter into an arbitration agreement
3.05
1.1 Requisites and restrictions to consent to arbitration
3.06
3.07
3.08
1.2 The parties’ capacity: a requirement to validly express and reach mutual consent to arbitration
3.09
3.10
2 Capacity to act as a party to arbitral proceedings
3.11
2.1 The distinctive feature of the capacity to be a party in arbitration
3.12
3.13
2.2 Restrictions on the capacity to act as a party to arbitral proceedings
3.14
3.15 Limitation from initiating arbitration
3.16 Limitation to continue a pending arbitration
B Restrictions on the States’/States Agencies’ Entitlement to Consent to Arbitration
3.17
3.18
1 The juridical qualification of the restrictions
3.19
3.20
3.21
3.22
2 Treaty and legislative solutions to overcome the restrictions
3.23
3.24
3.25
3 National courts’ and arbitral tribunals’ role in overcoming the restrictions
3.26
3.27
3.28
3.29
3.30
4 The different approaches in limiting the restrictions
3.31
4.1 Remedying the effect of the relevant law of the State party
3.32
4.2 Considering the law of the contract instead of the law of the State party
3.33
4.3 Adopting a substantive rule of international arbitration law
3.34
3.35
C Limitation of Parties’ Freedom to Consent to Arbitration: the Issue of Arbitrability
3.36
1 Dividing line between public and private justice
3.37
3.38
3.39
3.40
2 The different conceptions of arbitrability
3.41
2.1 Arbitrability integrating the existence of parties’ consent: the US concept
3.42
3.43
3.44
3.45
3.46
3.47
3.48
2.2 Arbitrability as outer limit for parties’ consent to arbitration: the prevailing international understanding of arbitrability
3.49
3.50
3.51
3.52 Consequence of inarbitrability
Criteria for the determination of arbitrability/inarbitrability
3.53
3.54
3.55 Types of inarbitrability
3.56 The hardcore of inarbitrability: the extra patrimonial disputes
The variable side of inarbitrability
3.57
3.58
3 Expansion of parties’ freedom to consent to arbitration or the dwindling importance of inarbitrability
3.59
3.60
3.1 Differentiating between the domestic context and the needs of international commerce
3.61
3.62
3.63
3.64
3.65
3.66
3.67
3.2 Ruling out the restrictive association of public policy and arbitrability
3.68
3.69
3.70
3.71
3.3 Extending the scope beyond contract and to mixed and public rights
3.72
3.73
3.74
3.75
3.76
3.77
3.4 Distinguishing the significance of States’ acts in the case of investment contracts
3.78
3.79
3.80
3.81
4 Inarbitrability examined in light of the consensual nature of arbitration
3.82
3.83
3.84
5 Arbitrability and public international law arbitration
3.85
4 The Juridical Nature of Arbitration with Particular Regard to its Consensual Nature
Preliminary Material
4.01
4.02
4.03
4.04
4.05
4.06
A Theories Which Reflect the Contraposition Between State Sphere and Private Sphere
4.07
1 The jurisdictional theory
4.08
4.09
4.10
4.11
2 The contractual theory
4.12
4.13
4.14
4.15
4.16
3 The mixed/hybrid theory
4.17
4.18
4.19
4.20
4.21
4.22
B Theories Which Reflect the Growing Acceptance to use Arbitration as a Dispute Resolution Mechanism
4.23
1 The autonomous theory
4.24
4.25
4.26
4.27
4.28
2 Legal pluralism: away from the traditional State-centric paradigm of territorial law-making towards plurality of legal orders
4.29
4.30
4.31
4.32
C The New Field of Investment Arbitration: Departing From Contract for Explaining Consent to Arbitration?
4.33
1 The issue: consent is not expressed in an arbitration agreement in the traditional sense
4.34
4.35
4.36
4.37
2 Views clinging to the juridical concept of contract for explaining consent to investment arbitration
4.38
4.39
2.1 Public offer of arbitration
4.40
4.41
4.42
4.43
4.44
2.2 Stipulation in favour of a third party
4.45
4.46
4.47
4.48
4.49
4.50
4.51
3 View relying on the juridical concept of ‘stipulation in favour of a third party’, but rejecting the ‘offer–acceptance’ scheme between host State and foreign investor
4.52
4.53
4 Views departing from the juridical concept of contract for explaining investment arbitration
4.54
4.1 From contract to public law; or investment arbitration as a mechanism of adjudicative review in public law
4.55
4.56
4.57
4.2 Granting to the investor a non-contractual right to arbitration: investment arbitration as a non-contractual but consensual dispute resolution mechanism
4.58
4.59
4.60
5 Instruments where both consent to use arbitration as a dispute resolution mechanism and consent to arbitration are expressed
4.61
5.1 National investment laws
4.62
4.63
5.2 Bilateral investment treaties (BITs)
4.64
4.65
4.66
5.3 Multilateral treaties
4.67
4.68
4.69
5 The Multiple Facets of Consent to Arbitration and the Determination of Jurisdiction
Preliminary Material
5.01
5.02
5.03
5.04
5.05
5.06
A Consensual as a Criterion of Arbitration’s Qualification
5.07
5.08
5.09
5.10
5.11
5.12
B Expression of Consent to Arbitration
5.13
5.14
1 Investment treaty arbitration: reaching of mutual consent for the use of arbitration as a dispute resolution mechanism
5.15
5.16
5.17
5.18
5.19
2 Types of expression of consent to arbitration
5.20
2.1 Action-oriented viewpoint
5.21
5.22 Expression of consent by promise
Offer
5.23
5.24
5.25
5.26
5.27
Acceptance
5.28
5.29
5.30 Expression of consent by conduct
Expression of consent by performance
5.31
5.32
5.33
5.34
5.35
2.2 Act-oriented viewpoint
5.36
5.37
5.38
5.39
3 The two sides of the host State’s consent in investment treaty arbitration
5.40
5.41
5.42
C Consent to Arbitration as Reaching of Mutual Consent, ie the Substantive Side of the Arbitration Agreement
5.43
5.44
1 Definition and types of arbitration agreement: away from the distinction submission agreement—arbitration clause
5.45
5.46
5.47
5.48
2 Arbitration agreement as a contract
5.49
5.50
2.1 The contractual character of arbitration
5.51
5.52
5.53
5.54
5.55
2.2 Formation of the contract
5.56
1
2
5.57
5.58
5.59
5.60
5.61
5.62
2.3 Essential elements of the arbitration agreement
5.63
5.64
2.4 Interpretation of consent
5.65
5.66
5.67
3 The effects of arbitration agreements
5.68
3.1 Positive (direct) effect
5.69
3.2 Negative (indirect) effect
5.70
5.71
3.3 Investment arbitration
5.72
4 Equivalence between ‘consensual’ and ‘contractual’ dispute resolution mechanism?
5.73
5.74
5.75
5.76
5.77
D Proposal for a Classification of Types of Consent
5.78
5.79
5.80
5.81
E Determination of Jurisdiction, With Particular Regard to Issues Concerning Parties’ Consent
5.82
5.83
1 Competence–competence
5.84
5.85
5.86
5.87
2 Autonomy of the arbitration agreement and the principle of separability
5.88
5.89 Material separability
5.90 Recognition of the doctrine of separability
5.91 Separability as a means to strengthen and protect the jurisdiction of arbitrators
The effect of separability
5.92
5.93
5.94
5.95
5.96 The normal situation: consent to the main contract typically constitutes consent to the arbitration agreement
Legal separability or towards consensualism
5.97
5.98
5.99
5.100
5.101
5.102
5.103 Autonomy and independence of the arbitration agreement in investment arbitration
Part II Consent in commercial arbitration
Preliminary Material
6 The Valid Reaching of Mutual Consent to Arbitration
Preliminary Material
6.01
6.02
6.03
A The Law Governing Arbitration Agreements
6.04
6.05
6.06
1 Connecting factors for the determination of the lex arbitri
6.07
1.1 Application of national arbitration laws v delocalization
6.08
1.2 National arbitration laws: seat of arbitration v party autonomy
6.09
6.10
6.11
2 The law governing the formal validity of the arbitration agreement
6.12
6.13
6.14
3 The law governing the substantive validity of the arbitration agreement
6.15
3.1 Traditional conflict of laws approaches
6.16
6.17
3.2 Substantive Rule of Private International Law
6.18
3.3 French approach: common intention of the parties
6.19
3.4 International arbitration practice
6.20
6.21
B The Form Requirement for Arbitration Agreements in Relation to Consent to Arbitration
6.22
6.23
1 The justification for a written form requirement
6.24
1.1 Proving initial consent
6.25
1.2 Proving the terms of the agreement
6.26
2 Differences in the requirement
6.27
6.28
6.29
6.30
6.31
6.32
3 Relationship between formal requirements and consent
6.33
6.34
3.1 The functions of form requirements in relation to the objective of ‘proving initial consent’
6.35
‘Cautionary’ function
6.36
6.37
6.38 ‘Evidential’ function
6.39 ‘Channelling’ function
3.2 Conformity with Article II(2) of the New York Convention as presumption of reaching consent?
6.40
3.3 Towards a triumph of substance over form: increasing consensualism
6.41
6.42
6.43
6.44
4 Consent in relation to the requirements of ‘signature’ or ‘exchange of documents’
6.45
1
2
4.1 Expression of consent to arbitration in different documents
6.46
4.2 Documents neither signed nor exchanged
6.47
4.3 Good faith and estoppel considerations
6.48
6.49
5 Exclusion of the ‘writing’ requirement from the determination of the scope of consent to arbitration
6.50
6.51
6.52
C The Substantive Elements of Consent to Arbitration
6.53
1 The essential elements for which consent is required
6.54
1.1 The agreement to arbitrate
6.55
6.56
1.2 Indication of the dispute or legal relationship which will be the subject matter of arbitration
6.57
1.3 Finality of awards
6.58
2 Other important elements
6.59
2.1 The seat of arbitration
6.60
6.61
2.2 Number and appointment of arbitrators
6.62
6.63
2.3 Language
6.64
6.65
2.4 Multiparty arbitrations
6.66
6.67
3 Implied terms: the example of confidentiality in English law
6.68
6.69
6.70
7 Scope and Interpretation of Consent to Arbitration
Preliminary Material
7.01
7.02
7.03
7.04
A Disputes Covered by the Arbitration Agreement
7.05
7.06
7.07
7.08
7.09
7.10
7.11
B Set-off and Counterclaims
7.12
7.13
7.14
7.15
1 Set-off
7.16
1.1 Cross-claim is not subject to a jurisdiction clause or a different arbitration clause
7.17
7.18
1.2 Cross-claim is subject to a jurisdiction clause or a different arbitration clause
7.19
7.20
7.21
7.22
7.23
2 Counterclaims
7.24
7.25
7.26
C Interpretation of Consent to Arbitration
7.27
1 Applying the general principles of contractual interpretation
7.28
1.1 Interpretation in good faith
7.29
7.30
1.2 Effective interpretation
7.31
7.32
7.33
1.3 Interpretation contra proferentem
7.34
7.35
2 Inclinations in interpreting?
7.36
2.1 Restrictive interpretation
7.37
7.38
2.2 Extensive interpretation
7.39
7.40
7.41
7.42
2.3 Neutral interpretation
7.43
7.44
7.45
3 Interpreting pathological clauses
7.46
7.47
7.48
8 Consent to Arbitration with a Perceived Reduced Consensual Character
Preliminary Material
8.01
8.02
8.03
8.04
A Unilateral Arbitration Agreements
8.05
8.06
8.07
8.08
1 The substantive validity
8.09
8.10
8.11
8.12
2 The time of consent to arbitration
8.13
8.14
8.15
B Arbitration Clauses Incorporated by Reference
8.16
8.17
1 Form and consent
8.18
1.1 The New York Convention as starting point
8.19
8.20
8.21
8.22
8.23
8.24
8.25
1.2 National arbitration laws
8.26
Jurisdiction taking a restrictive approach, ie requiring specific reference
8.27
8.28
Jurisdiction taking a liberal approach, ie allowing general reference
8.29
8.30
1.3 The relation between form and consent to arbitration with regard to arbitration clauses by reference
8.31
8.32
8.33
2 Interpretation of consent
8.34
8.35
2.1 Explicit reference
8.36
2.2 Global reference
8.37
8.38
8.39
2.3 Two typical situations with arbitration clauses incorporated by reference: charterparties and reinsurance contracts
8.40
8.41
8.42
8.43
C Arbitration Clauses in Articles of Association
8.44
8.45
8.46
8.47
8.48
8.49
8.50
8.51
8.52
9 Extension of Consent to Arbitration
Preliminary Material
9.01
9.02
A Extension of Consent to Arbitration by Application of General Principles of Contract Law or Corporate Law
9.03
1 Agency and consent
9.04
9.05
1.1 Form requirement and consent
9.06
9.07
1.2 Agent exceeding the scope of delegated powers
9.08
9.09
1.3 The position of the agent in the case of arbitration on the side of the principal in the United States
9.10
2 Transfer of arbitration agreements and consent
9.11
2.1 Assignment
9.12
The principle: automatic assignment
9.13
9.14
9.15 Necessity to comply with the written form requirement
9.16 The issue with consent
With regard to the assignee
9.17
9.18
9.19
With regard to the obligor
9.20
9.21
9.22 The rationale behind automatic assignment
2.2 Subrogation by operation of law, third party beneficiaries, and universal succession
9.23
9.24 Subrogation by operation of law
9.25 Universal succession
Third party beneficiaries
9.26
9.27
9.28
9.29 Benefiting from the arbitration agreement because of an operation of law: the relationship with consent
B Extension of Consent to Arbitration to Non-Signatories
9.30
9.31
9.32
1 The ‘group of companies’ doctrine
9.33
9.34
1.1 A brief characterization of the doctrine
9.35
9.36
1.2 Countries’ different approaches
9.37
France
9.38
9.39
9.40
9.41
9.42
9.43
9.44
Switzerland
9.45
9.46
9.47 England
9.48 United States
1.3 The theoretical foundation of the doctrine and its rejection
9.49
9.50
1.4 The party’s conduct in relation to consent
9.51
9.52
2 The doctrine of arbitral estoppel
9.53
2.1 The doctrine of arbitral estoppel with respect to arbitration agreements
9.54
9.55
1
2
2.2 The doctrine in relation to consent to arbitration
9.56
9.57
9.58
9.59
9.60
3 Extension on grounds unrelated to consent
9.61
3.1 Alter ego and lifting the corporate veil
9.62
9.63
9.64
3.2 Extension in the interest of the administration of justice
9.65
4 Multiple contracts and successive contracts
9.66
9.67
4.1 Multiple contracts
9.68
9.69
9.70
9.71
(a)
(b)
4.2 Successive contracts
9.72
9.73
10 Consent to Arbitration Related to Procedural Mechanisms
Preliminary Material
10.01
10.02
A Joinder and Intervention of Third Parties in Arbitrations
10.03
1 Institutional arbitration
10.04
ICC Rules
10.05
10.06
10.07
10.08
10.09
10.10
10.11
10.12
10.13 LCIA Rules
10.14 NAI Rules
Swiss Rules
10.15
10.16
10.17
2 Ad hoc arbitration
10.18
3 National arbitration legislation
10.19
4 Parties’ consent related to joinder and intervention of additional parties in arbitrations
10.20
10.21
10.22
10.23
B Consolidation of Arbitrations
10.24
10.25
1 Consolidation of arbitrations between different parties
10.26
1.1 With the parties’ consent in the arbitration agreement
10.27
10.28
Express agreement
10.29
10.30
Implied agreement
10.31
10.32
10.33
Reference to arbitration rules
10.34
10.35
10.36
10.37 CEPANI Rules
10.38 Swiss Rules
10.39 JCAA Rules
10.40 CIMAR
1.2 National arbitration legislation
10.41
‘False’ legislative solutions
10.42
10.43
‘Real’ legislative solutions
10.44
10.45
10.46
The solution adopted in Australia and New Zealand
10.47
10.48
The situation in the United States
10.49
10.50
10.51
1.3 Parties’ consent related to consolidation
10.52
10.53
2 Consolidation of arbitrations between the same parties
10.54
10.55
ICC Rules
10.56
10.57
10.58
10.59 Swiss Rules/CEPANI Rule
10.60 SCC Rules
3 Consolidation of arbitrations and court proceedings into a single arbitration
10.61
10.62
10.63
4 Practical consolidation
10.64
4.1 Appointment of same arbitrators
10.65
10.66
4.2 Concurrent hearings
10.67
10.68
10.69
4.3 Staying one proceeding
10.70
4.4 String arbitrations
10.71
C Problems of Enforcing Awards in Multiparty Arbitrations
10.72
10.73
10.74
Part III Consent in Investment Arbitration
Preliminary Material
11 Expression and Reaching of Consent to Arbitration
Preliminary Material
11.01
11.02
11.03
A The Formal Requirement of Consent to Arbitration
11.04
11.05
11.06
11.07
B Conditions Prior to Consent to Arbitration
11.08
1 Fork in the road provisions
11.09
11.10
11.11
11.12
11.13
11.14
11.15
11.16
11.17
11.18
2 Waiver of local remedies
11.19
11.20
11.21
11.22
11.23
3 Amicable negotiation period
11.24
11.25
11.26
11.27
C Ways of Expressing and Reaching Consent to Arbitration
11.28
11.29
11.30
11.31
1 Consent through direct agreement between the parties
11.32
11.33
11.34
11.35
11.36
2 Consent through host State (national) investment legislation
11.37
2.1 Offer by the host State
11.38
11.39
2.2 Acceptance by the foreign investor
11.40
Acceptance of the offer by instituting proceedings
11.41
11.42
11.43 Acceptance of the offer prior to instituting proceedings
3 Consent through investment treaties
11.44
11.45
3.1 Bilateral investment treaties (BITs)
11.46
11.47
11.48 Offer by the host State
Offer to submit to ICSID’s jurisdiction
11.49
11.50
Offer of several alternatives of arbitration
11.51
11.52
11.53
11.54 BITs provisions not constituting actual binding offers
BITs referring to future consent
11.55
11.56
11.57 BITs referring to arbitration without giving consent
11.58 Acceptance by the foreign investor
Acceptance by instituting proceedings
11.59
11.60
Acceptance of offer prior to instituting proceedings
11.61
11.62
BITs ignoring the foreign investor’s consent
11.63
11.64
3.2 Consent through multilateral investment treaties
11.65
11.66 The NAFTA
Offer by the host State
11.67
11.68
Acceptance by the foreign investor
11.69
11.70
11.71 Reaching of mutual consent to arbitration
Choice of the ICSID or the UNCITRAL Arbitration Rules by the foreign investor
11.72
11.73
11.74
11.75 The Energy Charter Treaty
Offer by the host State
11.76
11.77
11.78
Acceptance by the foreign investor
11.79
11.80
11.81 The rationale behind Article 26 of the ECT
D Consent to Arbitration From a Time Perspective
11.82
11.83
11.84
1 Expression of consent from a time perspective
11.85
1.1 From (temporal) symmetry to (temporal) asymmetry
11.86
11.87 Consent through direct agreement between the parties
State’s public offer in its national legislation or in an international treaty
11.88
11.89
11.90
1.2 From retrospective to prospective expression of State’s consent to arbitrate international claims
11.91
11.92 Retrospective consent of the State
Prospective consent of the State
11.93
11.94
Differences between retrospective consent and prospective consent
11.95
11.96
11.97
2 Reaching mutual consent from a time perspective
11.98
2.1 Time of reaching mutual consent
11.99
11.100
2.2 Relevance of the time of reaching mutual consent
11.101
2.3 Irrevocability of consent
11.102
11.103
11.104
Irrevocability after perfection of consent
11.105
11.106
11.107
11.108
11.109 The binding and irrevocable nature of perfected consent as manifestation of ‘ pacta sunt servanda ’
Insulation process through the acceptance by the investor of legislative or treaty-based offers?
11.110
11.111
11.112
11.113 Prohibition of indirect withdrawal/revocation of consent
11.114 Notification in accordance to Article 25(4) of the ICSID Convention
Denunciation of the ICSID Convention
11.115
11.116
11.117
11.118
11.119
Withdrawal of investment authorization
11.120
11.121
11.122
Withdrawal/revocation of the host State’s consent to arbitration contained in national investment legislation
11.123
11.124
11.125
11.126
Termination of investment treaties containing the host State’s consent to arbitration
11.127
11.128
11.129
The importance of the investment: three contractual proposals
11.130
11.131
11.132
11.133
11.134
12 The Applicable Law and Interpretation of Consent
Preliminary Material
12.01
12.02
12.03
12.04
A Applicable Law and Interpretation of Consent to Arbitration: International or National Law?
12.05
12.06
12.07
12.08
1 Direct arbitration agreements in investment contracts
12.09
12.10
12.11
2 National investment laws
12.12
12.13
12.14
12.15
12.16
12.17
12.18
12.19
12.20
3 Investment treaties
12.21
12.22
3.1 The distinctiveness of investment treaty arbitration: the host State is bound by two agreements
12.23
12.24
12.25
3.2 Objective v subjective criteria when interpreting
12.26
3.3 Standing offer of the host State: treaty interpretation in accordance to the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties
12.27
12.28
12.29
Article 31 of the VCLT
12.30
12.31
Article 32 of the VCLT
12.32
12.33
3.4 The law applicable to the host State–foreign investor relationship
12.34
12.35
12.36
12.37
4 The importance of the object of interpretation, ie the content of mutual consent reached with the arbitration agreement
12.38
12.39
12.40
12.41
12.42
5 Overcoming the public international law/private international law dichotomy?
12.43
12.44
12.45
B Inclinations in Interpreting?
12.46
12.47
1 Restrictive interpretation
12.48
12.49
12.50
12.51
12.52
12.53
2 Extensive interpretation
12.54
12.55
12.56
12.57
3 Objective interpretation
12.58
12.59
12.60
12.61
12.62
C Expansive Interpretation in Case of Successive Legal Instruments
12.63
12.64
12.65
12.66
D Principles of Interpretation
12.67
1 Pacta sunt servanda
12.68
12.69
12.70
2 Interpretation in good faith
12.71
3 Interpretation according the spirit of ICSID: teleological approach
12.72
4 Further principles of contractual interpretation?
12.73
12.74
12.75
12.76
E Umbrella Clauses: Expansion of Host State’s Consent to Arbitration by Elevating Contractual Disputes to Treaty Disputes
12.77
12.78
12.79
12.80
1 The concept of ‘umbrella clause’
12.81
12.82
12.83
2 Emergence of umbrella clauses in modern investment treaties and in investment arbitration case law
12.84
12.85
3 Differences among umbrella clauses
12.86
3.1 Placement of the umbrella clause within the BITs framework
12.87
12.88
3.2 Scope and nature of the obligations undertaken
12.89
12.90
3.3 Different formulations of the umbrella clauses in the investment treaties
12.91
12.92
4 The main factor affecting the expansion of the host State’s consent: the interpretation of umbrella clauses
12.93
4.1 The differing SGS cases
12.94
The conflicting outcomes
12.95
12.96
Restrictive v expansive interpretation following a different approach vis-à-vis literal interpretation
12.97
12.98
12.99
12.100
4.2 Interpretation approaches of umbrella clauses
12.101
12.102 Cases in which tribunals adopted a rather restrictive or balanced way of interpretation
12.103 Rejection of an interpretation ‘in favour of the foreign investor’
12.104 Distinction between ‘State as a merchant’/‘State as a sovereign’
12.105 Differentiation based on the intensity of the governmental intervention
12.106 Cases in which tribunals adopted a rather expansive method of interpretation
12.107 Rejection of the differentiation of types of investment agreements
12.108 Ordinary meaning
Principle of effectiveness
12.109
12.110
13 Consent and Jurisdiction
Preliminary Material
13.01
13.02
A Consent as the Subjective Side of Jurisdiction
13.03
13.04
13.05
13.06
13.07
13.08
13.09
B Consent and Jurisdiction Ratione Materiae
13.10
1 The host State’s measure: the trigger of the dispute
13.11
13.12
13.13
2 The legal dispute
13.14
13.15
3 The direct nexus between the legal dispute and the investment (‘arising directly out’)
13.16
13.17
13.18
13.19
13.20
4 The investment
13.21
13.22
13.23
13.24
4.1 ICSID Convention as outer limit for parties’ consent
13.25
13.26
13.27
13.28
13.29
4.2 The importance of State parties’ consent to arbitration (offers) in defining ‘investment’
13.30
Different ways of defining ‘investment’
13.31
13.32
13.33
13.34 Limitations on State parties’ consent to arbitration (offers)
Relation ICSID Convention—investment treaties with regard to State parties’ consent to arbitration (offers)
13.35
13.36
13.37
Double keyhole approach
13.38
13.39
4.3 The growing importance of the State parties’ will in defining ‘investment’
13.40
13.41
13.42
13.43
13.44
4.4 Expansion of consent to arbitration in investment treaty case law because of a broad definition/interpretation of the concept of ‘investment’ in the BITs
13.45
13.46
13.47
13.48
13.49
13.50
13.51
13.52
13.53
13.54
13.55
13.56
13.57
13.58
C Consent and Jurisdiction Ratione Personae
13.59
1 The host State
13.60
2 The foreign investor
13.61
2.1 The foreign investor’s nationality
13.62
Definition of ‘nationality’ in case of silence of the investment treaty
13.63
13.64
13.65
The contracting State parties’ definition of ‘investor’ in the investment treaty prevails over the economic reality
13.66
13.67
13.68
13.69
2.2 Expansion of consent to arbitration in relation to jurisdiction ratione personae: foreign control of legal entities with the nationality of the host State
13.70
13.71
13.72 Agreement on foreign nationality
By express agreement
13.73
13.74
By provisions in national investment legislations or investment treaties
13.75
13.76
13.77
13.78
13.79
13.80 By implied agreement
No correlation between consent to arbitration and agreement on foreign nationality
13.81
13.82
13.83
13.84 The concept of ‘control’
Circumstances leading to control/test for control
13.85
13.86
Legal potential to control v actual exercise of control
13.87
13.88
13.89
13.90
13.91
Direct/indirect control
13.92
13.93
13.94
13.95
13.96
The relevant party for the control
13.97
13.98
13.99
The concept of ‘foreignness’ related to control
13.100
13.101
13.102
13.103
13.104
13.105
2.3 The limits of ‘nationality planning’ in relation to State’s consent to arbitration
13.106
13.107
13.108
D Consent and Jurisdiction Ratione Temporis
13.109
13.110
13.111
1 The relevant date to determine jurisdiction
13.112
13.113
13.114
2 Entering into force of the investment treaty’s obligations forming the basis for the foreign investor’s claim
13.115
2.1 The principle: non-retroactivity of treaties
13.116
13.117
13.118
13.119
2.2 Provisional application of treaties
13.120
13.121
3 Host State’s consent to arbitration (offer) in relation to the time when the investment is made/the dispute has arisen
13.122
3.1 Consent to arbitration in relation to the time when the investment is made
13.123
13.124
13.125
3.2 Consent to arbitration in relation to the time when the investment dispute has arisen
13.126
13.127
13.128
13.129
13.130
13.131
13.132
13.133
4 Relation between host State’s consent to arbitration (offer) and entry into force of substantive investment treaty’s obligations
13.134
4.1 Different inter-temporal rules for jurisdiction and substantive investment treaty’s obligations
13.135
13.136
4.2 The principle: applicability of the substantive law in force when facts occurred
13.137
13.138
4.3 Cases where the scope of consent to arbitration is limited to investment treaty’s breach claims
13.139
4.4 Acts of continuing character: taking into account facts occurring prior to the tribunal’s jurisdiction ratione personae
13.140
13.141
13.142
13.143
5 Time limit for claiming, ie temporally limited host State’s consent to arbitration (offer)
13.144
13.145
E Consent With Regard to Procedural Mechanisms: Provisions Aimed at Avoiding the Duplication of Proceedings and Consolidation Provisions
13.146
13.147
13.148
1 In ICSID arbitrations
13.149
13.150
13.151
2 Investment treaties
13.152
2.1 The consolidation effect of provisions aimed at avoiding the duplication of proceedings
13.153
13.154 Fork in the road provisions
13.155 Waiver of local remedies
13.156 The prior recourse to national courts for a fixed period of time
13.157 The provisions aimed at avoiding the duplication of proceedings with regard to consent to arbitration
2.2 Consolidation
13.158
13.159 The NAFTA and consolidation
13.160 Some essential features of NAFTA consolidation
The condition for consolidation: multiple claims arising from a ‘same State measure’
13.161
13.162
13.163 The rationale behind consolidation
Consolidation order upon request of one of the parties
13.164
13.165
The consolidation tribunal’s discretionary power to order consolidation
13.166
13.167
Is NAFTA consolidation ultimately based upon consent?
13.168
13.169
13.170
13.171 Model BITs and free trade agreements with consolidation provisions
13.172 The NAFTA as example
The issue of parties’ consent
13.173
13.174
13.175
13.176
3 Consolidation in commercial and investment arbitration: different approaches with regard to parties’ consent
13.177
13.178
14 The Scope of Consent In Investment Arbitration
Preliminary Material
14.01
A The Scope of Consent and its Limitations
14.02
1 The scope of consent
14.03
2 The limitations of the scope of consent
14.04
2.1 Limitations in the offer of the host State
14.05
14.06 In national investment legislations
In the BITs
14.07
14.08
14.09 In multilateral investment treaties
2.2 Limitations in the acceptance by the investor? A false question
14.10
14.11
3 Classification of investment treaties according to the scope of consent/limitations of the scope of consent
14.12
1
2
3
4
5
B Counterclaims
14.13
14.14
14.15
1 In ICSID arbitrations
14.16
14.17
14.18
2 The requirement to be ‘within the scope of the consent of the parties’
14.19
14.20
14.21
3 In arbitrations in accordance with the UNCITRAL Arbitration Rules
14.22
14.23
14.24
C Consent and Most-Favoured-Nation Clauses
14.25
14.26
1 The issue in the relationship between MFN clauses and dispute settlements provisions in investment treaties
14.27
1.1 The MFN clause as a typical substantive commitment of investment treaties
14.28
14.29
1.2 The importance of dispute settlement provisions in investment treaties
14.30
1.3 The application of MFN clauses to dispute resolution mechanisms
14.31
14.32
14.33
14.34
14.35
2 Differentiation in the application of MFN clauses depending on how consent to arbitration is affected
14.36
2.1 Procedural obstacles to the institution of arbitration proceedings are at stake
14.37
14.38
14.39
14.40
14.41
14.42
14.43
14.44
14.45
2.2 Scope of the host State’s consent to arbitration is at stake
14.46
Create jurisdiction where it does not exist
14.47
14.48
14.49
Extension of the host State’s consent to arbitration to contract claims
14.50
14.51
Enlarging the scope of host State’s consent to arbitration to other categories of claims
14.52
14.53
14.54
Extension of the host State’s consent to arbitration because of retroactive application of the BIT
14.55
14.56
2.3 The rationale behind the differentiation
14.57
14.58
14.59
14.60
2.4 Cases departing from the rationale of the differentiation
14.61
14.62
14.63
3 MFN clauses with regard to enlargement of the scope of the host State’s consent to arbitration
14.64
3.1 The unequivocally worded MFN clauses
14.65
14.66
3.2 The neutrally worded MFN clauses
14.67
Different views expressed by scholars
14.68
14.69
Not unduly favour the MFN provision over a dispute resolution provision of equally rank
14.70
14.71
Limits in the creation of a level playing field for foreign investors: the consensual nature of arbitration
14.72
14.73
14.74
14.75
D Delimitation From State to State Arbitration Provided for in Investment Treaties
14.76
14.77
1 Typical interstate arbitration model
14.78
14.79
2 Object of arbitration’s consent
14.80
14.81
14.82
3 Expression and reaching of consent
14.83
14.84
4 Determination of the validity and interpretation of consent to interstate arbitration
14.85
14.86
5 Relation investor claim—interstate arbitration
14.87
14.88
15 Conclusion
Preliminary Material
15.01
15.02
15.03
A The Different Perspectives of Consent
15.04
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
1 The definition perspective
15.05
15.06
15.07
2 The evolution perspective
15.08
15.09
15.10
3 The structural perspective
15.11
15.12
15.13
15.14
15.15
15.16
4 The validity perspective
15.17
15.18
15.19
15.20
15.21
15.22
15.23
15.24
15.25
15.26
5 The scope perspective
15.27
15.28
15.29
15.30
15.31
6 The enlargement perspective
15.32
15.33
15.34
15.35
15.36
15.37
15.38
15.39
15.40
7 The procedural needs perspective
15.41
15.42
15.43
15.44
15.45
B The Consensual and Contractual Nature of Arbitration
15.46
15.47
15.48
15.49
15.50
15.51
Further Material
Bibliography
Index
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Table of Legislation
From:
Consent in International Arbitration
Andrea Marco Steingruber
Content type:
Book content
Product:
International Commercial Arbitration [ICMA]
Series:
Oxford International Arbitration Series
Published in print:
15 March 2012
ISBN:
9780199698158
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