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E-grāmata: Injunctive Relief and International Arbitration

(Steptoe & Johnson LLP and University of Bedfordshire)
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"This book explores from an English law and Institutional perspective the various types of injunctive relief that are available to a party before and during arbitral proceedings. In particular, this book examines the basis of the power of English Courts to grant such injunctions and explains when such injunctions will be granted. It considers any limitations attached to such injunctions and the relationship between section 44 of the Arbitration Act 1996 and section 37 of the Senior Courts Act 1981. It also provides an in-depth analysis of case law and the emerging trends in this area of arbitration, as well as the powers of arbitrators under the ICC and LCIA Rules to grant such relief and other remedies that might be available to a party seeking to uphold an arbitration agreement.This book will be a vital reference tool for practitioners, arbitrators and postgraduate students. "--

This book explores from an English law and Institutional perspective the various types of injunctive relief that are available to a party before and during arbitral proceedings.

In particular, this book examines the basis of the power of English Courts to grant such injunctions and explains when such injunctions will be granted. It considers any limitations attached to such injunctions and the relationship between section 44 of the Arbitration Act 1996 and section 37 of the Senior Courts Act 1981.

It also provides an in-depth analysis of case law and the emerging trends in this area of arbitration, as well as the powers of arbitrators under the ICC and LCIA Rules to grant such relief and other remedies that might be available to a party seeking to uphold an arbitration agreement.

This book will be a vital reference tool for practitioners, arbitrators and postgraduate students.

Recenzijas

impressively manages to cover a huge number of important and difficult topics in the space of 150 pages. In doing so, it imposes a useful framework on a multitude of overlapping issues. It summarises key developments and identifies uncertainties for the future. David Owen QC, 20 Essex Street

Dedication v
Foreword vii
Preface viii
Table of cases
xiii
Table of statutes
xxiii
Table of statutory instruments
xxvi
1 Arbitration Agreements
Introduction
1(1)
Definition of arbitration agreement
2(13)
Construction of arbitration clauses
15(5)
Unilateral arbitration agreements
20(9)
Law governing arbitration agreement
29(20)
Seat of arbitration
49(6)
Pathological clauses
55(4)
Conflicting clauses
59(7)
Assignment of arbitration clauses under English law
66(2)
Assignment during a pending arbitration
68(4)
Termination of arbitration agreements
72
2 Anti-Suit Injunctions and Arbitration
Introduction
1(2)
Section 37 of the Senior Courts Act 1981
3(5)
Anti-suit injunctions and the Brussels Regulation
8(3)
Foreign-seated arbitrations
11(1)
Pre-existing restraining injunction from a foreign court
12(2)
Anti-suit injunction
14(6)
Unconscionable conduct
20(7)
Single-forum cases
27(2)
American Cyanamid test
29(5)
Breach of arbitration agreement/contractual injunction
34(9)
What degree of probability is needed?
43(4)
Anti-suit injunctions and cause of action
47(4)
Recent developments and cause of action
51(6)
Anti-suit injunctions and delay
57(4)
International comity
61(5)
The effect of anti-suit injunctions
66(2)
Undertakings and anti-suit injunctions
68(1)
Sovereign States and anti-suit injunctions
69(2)
Anti-suit injunctions and challenge to awards
71(1)
Anti-suit injunctions: a tactical shield?
72(1)
Human rights and anti-suit injunctions
73
3 Anti-Suit Injunctions and the Brussels Regulation
Introduction
1(1)
Arbitration and the Brussels Regulation
2(3)
Scope of arbitration exception: the English approach
5(3)
Anti-suit injunctions: pre-West Tankers
8(2)
The English approach post-Turner and Gasser
10(2)
West Tankers in the ECJ
12(18)
Pre-emptive anti-suit injunction
30(4)
Brussels 1 Recast Regulation and arbitration
34
4 Procedure and Jurisdiction
Introduction
1(2)
Submission to jurisdiction
3(1)
Service by alternative method
4(4)
Service out of jurisdiction
8(1)
Service out of jurisdiction: EU or EFTA countries
9(1)
Arbitration claim
10(3)
Arbitration claim form
13(2)
Service and arbitration claim forms
15(1)
Acknowledgement of service
16(1)
Gateways
17(2)
CPR PD 6B, para 3.1(20)
19(1)
CPR PD 6B, para 3.1(6)(c)
20(1)
Retrospective reliance on gateways
21(3)
Hearing arbitration claims
24(4)
Private hearing and European Convention of Human Rights ("ECHR")
28(1)
Discontinuance of arbitration claims
29
5 Anti-Suit Injunctions and Arbitrators
Introduction
1(3)
Section 38 of the Act
4(2)
Section 48 of the Act
6(5)
Arbitrators and West Tankers
11(3)
Peremptory orders
14(1)
Injunctive relief and contempt of court
15(2)
Emergency arbitrators and anti-suit injunctions
17(2)
Anti-suit injunctions and ICSID arbitration
19
6 Injunctions and the Arbitration Act 1996
Introduction
1(1)
Section 44: an overview
2(10)
Urgency
12(2)
The purpose of section 44(3)
14(9)
Section 44 and freezing injunctions
23(8)
Section 44 and ICSID arbitrations
31(6)
Appeals and injunctions
37(3)
Certainty and injunctive relief
40(4)
Section 44 and third parties
44(7)
CPR PD 6B, para 3.1(6)
51(1)
CPR PD 6B, para 3.1(3)
52(2)
Relationship between section 37 of SCA and section 44 of the Act
54(4)
Extending the power of the court
58(1)
Anti-suit injunctions and section 44
59(1)
Injunctive relief and section 72
60(10)
Taking part in proceedings
70(9)
Stay of proceedings and section 72
79
7 Anti-Arbitration Injunctions
Introduction
1(3)
Kompetenz-Kompetenz and anti-arbitration
4(1)
Separability and anti-arbitration
5(2)
New York Convention and anti-arbitration
7(1)
Restraining injunctions and arbitration: the early approach
8(5)
Arbitration Act 1996 and anti-arbitration injunctions
13(1)
The test for anti-arbitration injunctions
14(3)
Delay and anti-arbitration injunctions
17(1)
Anti-arbitration injunctions and foreign-seated arbitrations
18(5)
Supervisory jurisdiction and London-seated arbitrations
23(7)
Who decides -- the court or the tribunal?
30(13)
Taking steps in judicial proceedings
43(10)
Lack of jurisdiction and anti-arbitration injunctions
53(9)
Frustrating enforcement and anti-arbitration injunctions
62(3)
Brussels Regulation and anti-arbitration injunctions
65(1)
Injunctions directed at the arbitrators
66(2)
Anti-arbitration injunctions: non-ICSID perspective
68(3)
Anti-arbitration injunctions and enforcement of awards
71(1)
Anti-arbitration injunctions: an ICSID perspective
72
8 Damages and Alternative Remedies
Introduction
1(1)
Contractual right
2(2)
Breach of arbitration agreement and recovery of costs
4(4)
Recovery of costs and proceedings commenced in England
8(5)
Assessment of recoverable costs
13(1)
Res judicata and recovery of costs
14(1)
Breach of arbitration agreement and damages
15(3)
Declarative relief and non-EU parties
18(8)
Declarative relief and EU parties
26(5)
Arbitrators and regulation judgments
31(5)
Declarative relief prior to a judgment
36(1)
Declarative relief and arbitrators
37(1)
Appointment of arbitrators
38(2)
Resisting enforcement of foreign judgment: non-EU
40(2)
Submission to foreign jurisdiction
42(2)
Refusal/non-enforcement in the EU
44(4)
Grounds for refusal
48(108)
APPENDICES
1 Arbitration Act 1996
156(55)
2 Civil Jurisdiction and Judgments Act 1982
211(31)
3 CPR Practice Direction 6B -- service out of the jurisdiction
242(29)
4 CPR Part 62 -- arbitration claims
271(9)
5 CPR Practice Direction 62 -- arbitration
280(7)
Index 287
Dr Hakeem Seriki is a senior lecturer in commercial law at the University of East Anglia. He is a consultant to the International Arbitration Group at Steptoe & Johnson and has written extensively on arbitration matters across a number of different journals.