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<strong>Arbitration</strong><br />

Contributing editors<br />

Gerhard Wegen and Stephan Wilske<br />

2016<br />

©<br />

Law Business Research 2016


<strong>Arbitration</strong> 2016<br />

Contributing editors<br />

Gerhard Wegen and Stephan Wilske<br />

Gleiss Lutz<br />

Publisher<br />

Gideon Roberton<br />

gideon.roberton@lbresearch.com<br />

Subscriptions<br />

Sophie Pallier<br />

subscriptions@gettingthedealthrough.com<br />

Business development managers<br />

Alan Lee<br />

alan.lee@gettingthedealthrough.com<br />

Adam Sargent<br />

adam.sargent@gettingthedealthrough.com<br />

Dan White<br />

dan.white@gettingthedealthrough.com<br />

Law<br />

Business<br />

Research<br />

Published by<br />

Law Business Research Ltd<br />

87 Lancaster Road<br />

London, W11 1QQ, UK<br />

Tel: +44 20 3708 4199<br />

Fax: +44 20 7229 6910<br />

© Law Business Research Ltd 2016<br />

No photocopying without a CLA licence.<br />

First published 2006<br />

Eleventh edition<br />

ISSN 1750-9947<br />

The information provided in this publication is<br />

general and may not apply in a specific situation.<br />

Legal advice should always be sought before taking<br />

any legal action based on the information provided.<br />

This information is not intended to create, nor does<br />

receipt of it constitute, a lawyer–client relationship.<br />

The publishers and authors accept no responsibility<br />

for any acts or omissions contained herein. Although<br />

the information provided is accurate as of January<br />

2016, be advised that this is a developing area.<br />

Printed and distributed by<br />

Encompass Print Solutions<br />

Tel: 0844 2480 112<br />

© Law Business Research 2016


CONTENTS<br />

Introduction7<br />

Gerhard Wegen and Stephan Wilske<br />

Gleiss Lutz<br />

China82<br />

Shengchang Wang, Ning Fei and Fang Zhao<br />

Hui Zhong Law Firm<br />

CEA14<br />

Pablo Poza and Ana Blanco<br />

Spanish Court of <strong>Arbitration</strong><br />

CEAC17<br />

Eckart Brödermann and Christine Heeg<br />

Chinese European <strong>Arbitration</strong> Centre<br />

Thomas Weimann<br />

Chinese European Legal Association<br />

DIS22<br />

Renate Dendorfer-Ditges<br />

DITGES PartGmbB<br />

European Court of <strong>Arbitration</strong> 26<br />

Mauro Rubino-Sammartano<br />

European Centre for <strong>Arbitration</strong> and Mediation<br />

HKIAC29<br />

Paulo Fohlin<br />

Magnusson<br />

Colombia91<br />

Alberto Zuleta-Londoño, Juan Camilo Fandiño-Bravo and<br />

Juan Camilo Jiménez-Valencia<br />

Cárdenas & Cárdenas Abogados<br />

Croatia97<br />

Zoran Vukić, Iva Sunko and Ana Pehar<br />

Vukić & Partners Ltd<br />

Denmark104<br />

Peter Lind Nielsen and Morten Grundahl<br />

Bird & Bird Advokatpartnerselskab<br />

Dominican Republic 110<br />

Fabiola Medina Garnes<br />

Medina Garrigó Attorneys at Law<br />

Ecuador118<br />

Rodrigo Jijón Letort, Juan Manuel Marchán,<br />

Juan Francisco González and Javier Jaramillo<br />

Pérez Bustamante & Ponce<br />

LCIA32<br />

Claire Stockford, Jane Wessel and Tom Stables<br />

Shepherd and Wedderburn LLP<br />

Egypt125<br />

Ismail Selim<br />

Khodeir and Nour in association with Al Tamimi and Company<br />

The Polish Chamber of Commerce 35<br />

Justyna Szpara and Maciej Łaszczuk<br />

Łaszczuk & Partners<br />

England & Wales 132<br />

Adrian Jones, Gordon McAllister, Edward Norman and John Laird<br />

Crowell & Moring LLP<br />

Angola38<br />

Agostinho Pereira de Miranda, Sofia Martins and Jayr Fernandes<br />

Miranda & Associados<br />

Equatorial Guinea 143<br />

Agostinho Pereira de Miranda and Sofia Martins<br />

Miranda & Associados<br />

Austria44<br />

Klaus Oblin<br />

Oblin Melichar<br />

Finland148<br />

Tom Vapaavuori and Juha Ojala<br />

Bird & Bird Attorneys Ltd<br />

Belgium50<br />

Johan Billiet<br />

Billiet & Co<br />

Cecile Oosterveen<br />

Association for International <strong>Arbitration</strong><br />

Brazil60<br />

Hermes Marcelo Huck, Rogério Carmona Bianco and<br />

Fábio Peixinho Gomes Corrêa<br />

Lilla, Huck, Otranto, Camargo Advogados<br />

Canada67<br />

John Judge and Daniel Dawalibi<br />

<strong>Arbitration</strong> Place<br />

Chile75<br />

Paulo Román, Marta Arias and Rodrigo Donoso<br />

Aninat Schwencke & Cía<br />

France155<br />

Thomas Bevilacqua and Ivan Urzhumov<br />

Foley Hoag LLP<br />

Germany165<br />

Stephan Wilske and Claudia Krapfl<br />

Gleiss Lutz<br />

Ghana172<br />

Kimathi Kuenyehia and Sarpong Odame<br />

Kimathi & Partners, Corporate Attorneys<br />

Greece180<br />

Antonios D Tsavdaridis<br />

Rokas Law Firm<br />

Hong Kong 188<br />

Paulo Fohlin<br />

Magnusson<br />

2 Getting the Deal Through – <strong>Arbitration</strong> 2016<br />

© Law Business Research 2016


CONTENTS<br />

Hungary196<br />

Chrysta Bán<br />

Bán, S Szabó & Partners<br />

Scotland313<br />

Brandon Malone<br />

Brandon Malone & Company<br />

India203<br />

Shreyas Jayasimha, Mysore Prasanna, Rajashree Rastogi,<br />

Spandana Ashwath and Sujaya Sanjay<br />

Aarna Law<br />

Italy215<br />

Cecilia Carrara<br />

Legance – Avvocati Associati<br />

Singapore321<br />

Edmund Jerome Kronenburg and Tan Kok Peng<br />

Braddell Brothers LLP<br />

Slovakia330<br />

Roman Prekop, Monika Simorova, Peter Petho and<br />

Eduard Kutenic<br />

Barger Prekop sro<br />

Japan222<br />

Shinji Kusakabe<br />

Anderson Mōri & Tomotsune<br />

Spain338<br />

Alberto Echarri<br />

Echarri & Brindle, Abogados<br />

Korea229<br />

BC Yoon, Richard Menard and Liz (Kyo-Hwa) Chung<br />

Kim & Chang<br />

Sweden346<br />

Simon Arvmyren<br />

Sandart & Partners<br />

Lithuania237<br />

Ramūnas Audzevičius and Rimantas Daujotas<br />

Motieka & Audzevičus<br />

Switzerland353<br />

Xavier Favre-Bulle, Harold Frey and Daniel Durante<br />

Lenz & Staehelin<br />

Malaysia244<br />

Foo Joon Liang<br />

Gan Partnership<br />

Taiwan360<br />

Helena H C Chen<br />

Pinsent Masons LLP<br />

Morocco253<br />

Azzedine Kettani<br />

Kettani Law Firm<br />

Tanzania367<br />

Wilbert Kapinga, Jacqueline Tarimo and Kamanga Kapinga<br />

Mkono & Co Advocates<br />

Mozambique260<br />

Agostinho Pereira de Miranda, Sofia Martins and<br />

Filipa Russo de Sá<br />

Miranda & Associados<br />

Myanmar266<br />

Kelvin Poon, Min Thein and Daryl Larry Sim<br />

Rajah & Tann Singapore LLP<br />

Nigeria272<br />

Dorothy Udeme Ufot, SAN<br />

Dorothy Ufot & Co<br />

Portugal281<br />

Sofia Martins and Pedro Sousa Uva<br />

Miranda & Associados<br />

Qatar288<br />

James Bremen, Christopher Humby and Gillian Carr<br />

Herbert Smith Freehills Middle East LLP<br />

Romania296<br />

Cristiana-Irinel Stoica, Andreea Micu and Daniel Aragea<br />

Stoica & Asociaţii<br />

Thailand373<br />

Kornkieat Chunhakasikarn and John Frangos<br />

Tilleke & Gibbins<br />

Turkey380<br />

İsmail G Esin, Özgun Çelebi and Doğan Gültutan<br />

Esin Attorney Partnership<br />

Ukraine388<br />

Oleg Alyoshin and Yuriy Dobosh<br />

Vasil Kisil & Partners<br />

United Arab Emirates 397<br />

Robert Stephen and Laura Askew<br />

Herbert Smith Freehills LLP<br />

United States 404<br />

Jack Thomas, Arlen Pyenson and Randa Adra<br />

Crowell & Moring LLP<br />

Venezuela411<br />

Fernando Peláez-Pier and José Gregorio Torrealba<br />

Hoet Pelaez Castillo & Duque<br />

Russia304<br />

Ilya Nikiforov, Alexey Karchiomov and Svetlana Popova<br />

Egorov, Puginsky, Afanasiev and Partners<br />

www.gettingthedealthrough.com 3<br />

© Law Business Research 2016


<strong>Arbitration</strong> Place<br />

CANADA<br />

Canada<br />

John Judge and Daniel Dawalibi<br />

<strong>Arbitration</strong> Place<br />

Laws and institutions<br />

1 Multilateral conventions relating to arbitration<br />

Is your country a contracting state to the New York Convention<br />

on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral<br />

Awards? Since when has the Convention been in force? Were<br />

any declarations or notifications made under articles I, X and<br />

XI of the Convention? What other multilateral conventions<br />

relating to international commercial and investment<br />

arbitration is your country a party to?<br />

Canada acceded to the New York Convention on 12 May 1986. Invoking<br />

the article I commercial reservation, Canada declared that the Convention<br />

would apply only to differences arising out of legal relationships, whether<br />

contractual or not, which were considered commercial under the laws<br />

of Canada; this declaration does not apply, however, in the province of<br />

Quebec. Canada did not invoke the reciprocity reservation under article<br />

I, nor were any declarations or notifications made under articles X and XI<br />

of the Convention.<br />

In Ontario, Canada’s largest province, the recognition and enforcement<br />

of foreign arbitral awards is also governed by the International<br />

Commercial <strong>Arbitration</strong> Act, which itself implements the UNCITRAL<br />

Model Law with some minor variations. In particular, Ontario expands the<br />

scope of enforceable awards by providing that for the purposes of article<br />

35 of the Model Law, an ‘arbitral award’ will include commercial arbitral<br />

awards made outside of Canada, even if the arbitration itself was not international<br />

as defined in article 1(3) of the Model Law.<br />

Canada is now a party to the Convention on the Settlement of<br />

Investment Disputes between States and Nationals of Other States (ICSID<br />

Convention), which came into effect on 1 December 2013.<br />

It should also be noted that Canada is a party to several multilateral<br />

free trade agreements that create binding investor-state arbitration obligations.<br />

These include the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA:<br />

in force), the Canada and European Union Comprehensive Economic<br />

and Trade Agreement (CETA: signed but not yet in force), and the Trans-<br />

Pacific Partnership (TPP: signed but not yet in force).<br />

2 Bilateral investment treaties<br />

Do bilateral investment treaties exist with other countries?<br />

Canada is a party to 29 bilateral investment treaties, known in Canada<br />

as ‘Foreign Investment Promotion and Protection Agreements’ (FIPAs).<br />

FIPAs are currently in force with Argentina, Armenia, Barbados, Benin,<br />

China, Costa Rica, Croatia, Czech Republic, Ecuador, Egypt, Hungary,<br />

Jordan, Kuwait, Latvia, Lebanon, Panama, Peru, Philippines, Poland,<br />

Romania, Russia, Serbia, Slovakia, Tanzania, Thailand, Trinidad and<br />

Tobago, Ukraine, Uruguay, and Venezuela. Canada is also a signatory to<br />

FIPAs with Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Côte d’Ivoire, Guinea, Mali, Nigeria,<br />

and Senegal, but these are not yet in force.<br />

Canada is also a party to 9 bilateral free trade agreements (FTAs) that<br />

contain investment arbitration provisions, namely with Chile, Colombia,<br />

Costa Rica, Honduras, Israel, Jordan, Korea, Panama and Peru. A bilateral<br />

FTA with Ukraine was concluded on 14 July 2014 but is not yet in force.<br />

3 Domestic arbitration law<br />

What are the primary domestic sources of law relating to<br />

domestic and foreign arbitral proceedings, and recognition and<br />

enforcement of awards?<br />

Canada is a federal state comprised of ten provinces, three territories and<br />

the federal Parliament. A limited range of matters are governed by the federal<br />

Commercial <strong>Arbitration</strong> Act (such as arbitrations involving the federal<br />

government or Crown corporations, and maritime or admiralty matters)<br />

but otherwise commercial arbitration is constitutionally within the exclusive<br />

legislative jurisdiction of the provinces and territories. Apart from<br />

Quebec, which follows a continental European civil law tradition, all other<br />

Canadian jurisdictions follow the common law.<br />

Each of the nine common law provinces has adopted the UNCITRAL<br />

Model Law either integrally or by incorporation with respect to international<br />

commercial arbitrations (the International <strong>Arbitration</strong> Acts). These<br />

provinces have adopted separate statutes to govern domestic commercial<br />

arbitrations, most of which are modelled on the Uniform <strong>Arbitration</strong> Act<br />

of the Uniform Law Conference of Canada. In general, the International<br />

<strong>Arbitration</strong> Acts will apply when the subject matter of the arbitration is<br />

international, pursuant to article 1(3) of the Model Law.<br />

The federal Commercial <strong>Arbitration</strong> Act and the provisions of<br />

Quebec’s Civil Code dealing with arbitration are based on the Model Law,<br />

and apply equally to domestic and international arbitrations.<br />

The 2006 amendments to the Model Law have not yet been implemented<br />

in any Canadian jurisdiction.<br />

4 Domestic arbitration and UNCITRAL<br />

Is your domestic arbitration law based on the UNCITRAL<br />

Model Law? What are the major differences between your<br />

domestic arbitration law and the UNCITRAL Model Law?<br />

The various International <strong>Arbitration</strong> Acts each implement minor variations<br />

to the Model Law. For example, Ontario’s International Commercial<br />

<strong>Arbitration</strong> Act implements the Model Law, with the following important<br />

modifications:<br />

• contrary to article 1(3)(c) of the Model Law, no effect will be given to an<br />

agreement between parties when the subject matter of an arbitration<br />

is international;<br />

• contrary to article 11(1), parties are unable to preclude an arbitrator by<br />

virtue of his or her nationality;<br />

• contrary to article 35, an arbitral award will include commercial arbitral<br />

awards made outside Canada, even if the arbitration itself was not<br />

international, as defined in article 1(3); and<br />

• an order of an arbitral tribunal for an interim measure of protection<br />

and the provision of security is subject to the provisions of the Model<br />

Law as if it were an award.<br />

5 Mandatory provisions<br />

What are the mandatory domestic arbitration law provisions<br />

on procedure from which parties may not deviate?<br />

The International <strong>Arbitration</strong> Acts themselves do not, in implementing the<br />

Model Law, specify which provisions are mandatory. Based on applicable<br />

www.gettingthedealthrough.com 67<br />

© Law Business Research 2016


CANADA<br />

<strong>Arbitration</strong> Place<br />

jurisprudence (such as the Ontario Superior Court’s 1998 decision in Noble<br />

China Inc v Lei, 42 O.R. (3d) 69), the prevailing view is that the following<br />

Model Law articles are mandatory:<br />

• article 18 (equal treatment of parties);<br />

• article 24 (hearings and written proceedings);<br />

• article 31 (form and contents of awards);<br />

• article 32 (termination of proceedings); and<br />

• articles 35 and 36 (recognition and enforcement).<br />

6 Substantive law<br />

Is there any rule in your domestic arbitration law that provides<br />

the arbitral tribunal with guidance as to which substantive law<br />

to apply to the merits of the dispute?<br />

Pursuant to article 28(2) of the Model Law, parties may select the substantive<br />

law applicable to their dispute. In the absence of such a selection, the<br />

arbitral tribunal shall apply the law determined by the conflict of laws rules<br />

that it considers to be applicable. In Ontario, article 28(2) of the Model Law<br />

is modified such that the arbitral tribunal shall, in the absence of a selection<br />

by the parties, apply the rules of law it considers to be appropriate in all<br />

the circumstances respecting the dispute.<br />

7 Arbitral institutions<br />

What are the most prominent arbitral institutions situated in<br />

your country?<br />

Domestic arbitrations in Canada are commonly conducted on an ad hoc<br />

basis. Some of the prominent Canadian-based arbitral institutions include:<br />

• ADR Institute of Canada (www.adrcanada.ca);<br />

• ADR Chambers (www.adrchambers.com/ca);<br />

• British Columbia International Commercial <strong>Arbitration</strong> Centre (www.<br />

bcicac.com); and<br />

• Institut de médiation et d’arbitrage du Quebec (www.imaq.org).<br />

Although not an arbitral institution, <strong>Arbitration</strong> Place in Toronto is a stateof-the-art<br />

hearing facility for domestic and international arbitrations, both<br />

ad hoc and institutional.<br />

Leading international institutions (such as the ICC, LCIA, HKIAC and<br />

ICDR) are also commonly selected to administer international arbitrations<br />

seated in Canada.<br />

<strong>Arbitration</strong> agreement<br />

8 Arbitrability<br />

Are there any types of disputes that are not arbitrable?<br />

With limited exceptions, any commercial matter is arbitrable in Canada,<br />

whether it is based on contract, tort or a statutory claim. As the Supreme<br />

Court of Canada held in Desputeaux v Éditions Chouette Inc, 2003 SCC 17,<br />

parties to an arbitration agreement have ‘virtually unfettered autonomy in<br />

identifying the disputes’ that may be arbitrable.<br />

In general, commercial disputes involving intellectual property, construction<br />

and engineering, technology licensing, distribution and agency,<br />

joint ventures, financing, and banking are all arbitrable. Internal corporate<br />

disputes, including shareholder disputes and oppression claims, may also<br />

be the subject of arbitration proceedings.<br />

With the exception of Quebec, employment agreements are generally<br />

not considered to be commercial for the purposes of arbitrability under the<br />

International <strong>Arbitration</strong> Acts.<br />

Regarding consumer disputes, some provinces such as Alberta,<br />

Ontario and Quebec have consumer protection legislation in place that<br />

relieves consumers from the effects of mandatory arbitration clauses. The<br />

Supreme Court of Canada’s ruling in Seidel v Telus Communications Inc,<br />

2011 SCC 15, also served to weaken the enforceability of consumer arbitration<br />

clauses in the common law jurisdictions, as have a number of Ontario<br />

lower court decisions dealing with class proceedings.<br />

Under certain statutory frameworks (particularly those dealing<br />

with matters of public interest) that establish robust investigative and<br />

enforcement mechanisms, such as the federal Criminal Code, the federal<br />

Competition Act and the securities legislation of the common law<br />

provinces, those mechanisms cannot be ousted by an arbitration clause.<br />

However, the review and assessment of legal fees chargeable to a client<br />

may also be determined by arbitration instead of a judicial procedure.<br />

9 Requirements<br />

What formal and other requirements exist for an arbitration<br />

agreement?<br />

The International <strong>Arbitration</strong> Acts implement article 7 of the Model Law,<br />

which only requires that an arbitration agreement be in writing. This<br />

requirement is satisfied by the creation of a signed document, by the<br />

exchange of documents providing a record of the agreement, or through<br />

incorporation by reference. Pursuant to various electronic commerce legislation<br />

in force across Canada, the formal writing requirement can often<br />

be satisfied through electronic forms of communication.<br />

10 Enforceability<br />

In what circumstances is an arbitration agreement no longer<br />

enforceable?<br />

The International <strong>Arbitration</strong> Acts implement article 8(1) of the Model<br />

Law, which provides that an arbitration agreement is unenforceable if it<br />

is ‘null and void, inoperative or incapable of being performed’. Pursuant<br />

to article 16 of the Model Law, an arbitration agreement shall be treated<br />

independently from the other terms of the contract in which it may be<br />

embedded.<br />

An arbitration agreement may be considered null or void in circumstances<br />

where the initial formation of the agreement itself is compromised,<br />

such as on the basis of non est factum, duress, fraud or mistake.<br />

An arbitration agreement may be inoperative in circumstances where<br />

the agreement was not void ab initio, but it ceases to have effect for reasons<br />

such as an expired time limit, waiver or where it is overridden by a competing<br />

legislative framework.<br />

Finally, an arbitration agreement may be unenforceable pursuant to<br />

article 8(1) where there is some impediment to the conduct of an arbitral<br />

proceeding that is beyond the parties’ control and that makes performance<br />

in accordance with the agreement impossible. One example of such circumstances<br />

would include the death of a named arbitrator.<br />

11 Third parties – bound by arbitration agreement<br />

In which instances can third parties or non-signatories be<br />

bound by an arbitration agreement?<br />

A third party to an arbitration agreement may, through consent, become<br />

bound by that agreement. In the absence of express consent, a third party’s<br />

consent may, in very limited circumstances, be implied under a number of<br />

different legal theories, including:<br />

• agency: an agent acting within his or her authority may bind a thirdparty<br />

principal;<br />

• assumption: a third party by its conduct and dealings may assume obligations<br />

under an arbitration agreement, such as a successor corporation<br />

following a merger or amalgamation;<br />

• equitable estoppel: a party may be estopped from relying on the<br />

absence of its signature on an arbitration agreement where that same<br />

party has sought enforcement for its own benefit; and<br />

• the ‘piercing the corporate veil’ and ‘alter ego’ doctrines.<br />

12 Third parties – participation<br />

Does your domestic arbitration law make any provisions with<br />

respect to third-party participation in arbitration, such as<br />

joinder or third-party notice?<br />

The International <strong>Arbitration</strong> Acts make no special provision for thirdparty<br />

participation in arbitral proceedings. An interested non-signatory<br />

may nevertheless participate in the arbitration, subject to prevailing procedural<br />

rules and the same theories described above (ie, through express<br />

consent or some form of implied consent (including the consent of the<br />

signatory parties)).<br />

68 Getting the Deal Through – <strong>Arbitration</strong> 2016<br />

© Law Business Research 2016


<strong>Arbitration</strong> Place<br />

CANADA<br />

13 Groups of companies<br />

Do courts and arbitral tribunals in your jurisdiction extend<br />

an arbitration agreement to non-signatory parent or<br />

subsidiary companies of a signatory company, provided that<br />

the non-signatory was somehow involved in the conclusion,<br />

performance or termination of the contract in dispute, under<br />

the ‘group of companies’ doctrine?<br />

The ‘group of companies’ doctrine has been recognised in a small body of<br />

Canadian jurisprudence where a non-signatory company has been bound<br />

by and allowed to participate in arbitral proceedings alongside a signatory<br />

parent or subsidiary (eg, the Ontario Superior Court’s decision in Xerox<br />

Canada Ltd v MPI Technologies Inc, 2006 CanLII 41006, where the court<br />

upheld a tribunal’s decision to allow a non-signatory parent company to<br />

participate as a claimant based on that parent’s involvement in the overall<br />

dispute resolution process).<br />

14 Multiparty arbitration agreements<br />

What are the requirements for a valid multiparty arbitration<br />

agreement?<br />

The International <strong>Arbitration</strong> Acts do not specifically address multiparty<br />

arbitration agreements, although such arbitrations are reasonably common<br />

in Canada under express contractual terms.<br />

Under Ontario’s International Commercial <strong>Arbitration</strong> Act, parties<br />

may make an application to the Superior Court of Justice for an order consolidating<br />

two or more arbitration proceedings, the result of which may be<br />

a multiparty arbitration. Where the court orders such a consolidation, the<br />

statute also provides that arbitrator selection for the consolidated tribunal<br />

will remain in the hands of the parties, if they can agree, failing which the<br />

court may appoint the arbitrators. A court order is not necessary, however,<br />

to effect such a consolidation: it may still be done by private agreement of<br />

the parties.<br />

Constitution of arbitral tribunal<br />

15 Eligibility of arbitrators<br />

Are there any restrictions as to who may act as an arbitrator?<br />

Would any contractually stipulated requirement for arbitrators<br />

based on nationality, religion or gender be recognised by the<br />

courts in your jurisdiction?<br />

There are no formal qualifications or restrictions imposed by law for arbitrators<br />

in either domestic or international arbitrations, other than basic<br />

tenets of natural justice requiring independence and impartiality.<br />

Sitting judges may serve as arbitrators, albeit without remuneration<br />

other than reasonable compensation for related expenses. However it is<br />

the accepted policy of the judiciary that sitting judges should not serve as<br />

arbitrators. Retired judges frequently act as arbitrators.<br />

The International Commercial <strong>Arbitration</strong> Acts of Ontario and British<br />

Columbia incorporate a modified version of article 11(1) of the Model Law<br />

in such a way as to eliminate a party’s right to restrict the choice of arbitrator<br />

according to nationality. No Canadian court has yet considered the<br />

Jivraj v Haswani case, though any efforts to limit arbitrator selection based<br />

on religion or ethnicity may intersect with the anti-discrimination provisions<br />

of various human rights statutes in force across Canada.<br />

16 Default appointment of arbitrators<br />

Failing prior agreement of the parties, what is the default<br />

mechanism for the appointment of arbitrators?<br />

Pursuant to articles 10 and 11 of the Model Law, in the absence of an agreement<br />

between the parties, the International <strong>Arbitration</strong> Acts set the default<br />

number of arbitrators at three, with each party selecting one arbitrator and<br />

those two appointees then selecting the presiding arbitrator.<br />

In circumstances of a default in the appointment of a sole arbitrator<br />

or a three-person panel, a party may apply to the court or to an agreed<br />

appointment authority. The leading Canadian arbitral institutions provide<br />

for similar procedural rules dealing with default appointments.<br />

In ad hoc arbitrations, or where neither the arbitration agreement<br />

nor the applicable arbitration rules provide for an appointing authority,<br />

the courts will assume the role of resolving defaults in the appointment of<br />

arbitrators.<br />

17 Challenge and replacement of arbitrators<br />

On what grounds and how can an arbitrator be challenged and<br />

replaced? Please discuss in particular the grounds for challenge<br />

and replacement, and the procedure, including challenge<br />

in court. Is there a tendency to apply or seek guidance from<br />

the IBA Guidelines on Conflicts of Interest in International<br />

<strong>Arbitration</strong>?<br />

The International <strong>Arbitration</strong> Acts implement articles 12 to 15 of the Model<br />

Law that address the challenge and replacement of arbitrators.<br />

The available grounds for challenge under article 12 of the Model Law<br />

are: (i) where there are justifiable doubts as to the arbitrator’s impartiality<br />

or independence; or (ii) where the arbitrator lacks the qualifications agreed<br />

to by the parties.<br />

In Canada, a challenge to an arbitrator’s impartiality or independence<br />

is assessed based on the ‘reasonable apprehension of bias’ test. The<br />

Supreme Court of Canada held in Wewaykum Indian Band v Canada, 2003<br />

SCC 45, that the applicable standard asks whether the apprehension of bias<br />

could arise in the mind of a reasonably informed person, viewing the matter<br />

realistically and practically, and having thought the matter through.<br />

The IBA Guidelines on Conflicts of Interest in International <strong>Arbitration</strong><br />

have not been the subject of significant judicial consideration. However,<br />

in Telesat Canada v Boeing Satellite Systems International Inc, 2010 ONSC<br />

4023, the Ontario Superior Court of Justice removed an arbitrator because<br />

of a reasonable apprehension of bias; in so doing, the court referred to the<br />

IBA Guidelines, which had not been formally incorporated by reference<br />

into the arbitration. The court nevertheless found that the IBA Guidelines<br />

represent the view of the ‘arbitration community’.<br />

Absent any agreement establishing a different challenge procedure,<br />

article 13(2) of the Model Law will apply, whereby a party must make its<br />

claim in writing to the tribunal within 15 days of discovering the ground for<br />

challenge. The arbitral tribunal shall then decide on the challenge, unless<br />

the challenged arbitrator first withdraws. If the challenge is rejected, the<br />

challenging party then has 30 days to raise the challenge with the courts<br />

(or another appointed authority such as an arbitral institution). The court’s<br />

decision on the challenge is not subject to an appeal.<br />

Pursuant to article 14 of the Model Law, an arbitrator may also be challenged<br />

where he or she is unable to carry out his or her functions without<br />

undue delay. In such a situation, which can arise for example when an arbitrator<br />

falls seriously ill, the Model Law provides that the arbitrator’s mandate<br />

terminates when he or she resigns or when the parties agree on the<br />

termination. A party may also ask the court to remove the arbitrator.<br />

In Ontario, if an arbitrator is replaced or removed, and unless the parties<br />

agree otherwise, all proceedings that have already taken place will start<br />

afresh.<br />

18 Relationship between parties and arbitrators<br />

What is the relationship between parties and arbitrators?<br />

Please elaborate on the contractual relationship between<br />

parties and arbitrators, neutrality of party-appointed<br />

arbitrators, remuneration, and expenses of arbitrators.<br />

Arbitrators are bound contractually to all parties to an arbitration agreement,<br />

and are held to the same standards of neutrality, impartiality and<br />

independence, regardless of who appointed them.<br />

In an ad hoc arbitration, arbitrators are typically remunerated on an<br />

hourly or daily basis, plus related expenses. Deposits and cancellations<br />

fees are common. In institutional arbitrations, fees are typically paid<br />

through the institution in accordance with its rules and policies.<br />

19 Immunity of arbitrators from liability<br />

To what extent are arbitrators immune from liability for their<br />

conduct in the course of the arbitration?<br />

Generally, arbitrators in Canada enjoy immunity from actions in negligence<br />

or breach of contract, similar to the judiciary. An arbitrator will benefit<br />

from this immunity where:<br />

• there is an existing dispute that the parties have submitted to the<br />

arbitrator;<br />

• the arbitrator is acting in a judicial or quasi-judicial capacity; and<br />

• the arbitrator is fulfilling his or her function in compliance with the<br />

provisions of the applicable legislation.<br />

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Whether this immunity also extends to intentional acts or bad faith is<br />

a question that has not received significant judicial consideration, and it is<br />

not addressed in the International <strong>Arbitration</strong> Acts.<br />

Jurisdiction and competence of arbitral tribunal<br />

20 Court proceedings contrary to arbitration agreements<br />

What is the procedure for disputes over jurisdiction if court<br />

proceedings are initiated despite an existing arbitration<br />

agreement, and what time limits exist for jurisdictional<br />

objections?<br />

Pursuant to article 8 of the Model Law, where court proceedings are initiated<br />

despite an existing arbitration agreement, the court will, on a motion,<br />

refer the parties to arbitration unless the agreement is null and void, inoperative<br />

or incapable of being performed. The motion must be brought by<br />

the party seeking to refer the matter to arbitration before it submits its first<br />

statement of substance in the judicial proceedings.<br />

The International <strong>Arbitration</strong> Acts generally implement article 8 in<br />

such a way that the court faced with these circumstances must also stay<br />

the court proceedings when referring the matter to arbitration. Even in the<br />

face of an allegation that the arbitration agreement is a nullity, the courts<br />

will, pursuant to the doctrine of competence-competence, refer the matter<br />

to the tribunal to make a determination on its own jurisdiction, unless the<br />

objection relates exclusively to a pure question of law (as opposed to questions<br />

of fact or mixed fact and law).<br />

21 Jurisdiction of arbitral tribunal<br />

What is the procedure for disputes over jurisdiction of the<br />

arbitral tribunal once arbitral proceedings have been initiated<br />

and what time limits exist for jurisdictional objections?<br />

Article 16 of the Model Law provides that an arbitral tribunal has the competence<br />

to rule on its own jurisdiction in the first instance. Parties have<br />

until the delivery of their statement of defence in the arbitration to raise<br />

a challenge that the tribunal lacks jurisdiction. Where a party believes that<br />

the tribunal has exceeded the scope of its authority, it must bring the challenge<br />

as soon as the impugned matter arises in the proceedings.<br />

If the tribunal rules on its own jurisdiction as a preliminary matter,<br />

the parties have 30 days from receipt of that decision to bring the question<br />

before the court, whose ruling is not subject to any further appeal. While<br />

a judicial decision is pending, the tribunal may nevertheless proceed with<br />

the arbitration and render an award.<br />

Arbitral proceedings<br />

22 Place and language of arbitration<br />

Failing prior agreement of the parties, what is the default<br />

mechanism for the place of arbitration and the language of the<br />

arbitral proceedings?<br />

The default place and language of arbitration is addressed by articles 20<br />

and 22 of the Model Law. If not addressed in the arbitration agreement or<br />

in applicable procedural rules, the tribunal is empowered to determine the<br />

place and language of arbitration, having regard to the circumstances of<br />

the case and the convenience of the parties.<br />

23 Commencement of arbitration<br />

How are arbitral proceedings initiated?<br />

Pursuant to article 21 of the Model Law, unless agreed otherwise the arbitral<br />

proceedings are deemed to start on the date on which a request for<br />

arbitration is received by the respondent. The International <strong>Arbitration</strong><br />

Acts do not prescribe any additional formal requirements, however the<br />

procedural rules of leading Canadian and international institutions, as well<br />

as the UNCITRAL rules, set out the required content.<br />

Where the formal requirements prescribed by an institution’s procedural<br />

rules are not followed, the Ontario Court of Appeal in Bell Canada v<br />

The Plan Group, 2009 ONCA 548 held that the applicable limitation period<br />

may bar the proceeding from going forward at a later time.<br />

24 Hearing<br />

Is a hearing required and what rules apply?<br />

Unless the parties agree otherwise, the arbitral tribunal has the discretion<br />

to conduct an oral hearing, or to instead proceed solely based on documentary<br />

evidence and written submissions. Some provinces (such as British<br />

Columbia) have implemented the Model Law (and article 24 in particular)<br />

such that oral hearings are required to be held in private.<br />

25 Evidence<br />

By what rules is the arbitral tribunal bound in establishing the<br />

facts of the case? What types of evidence are admitted and how<br />

is the taking of evidence conducted?<br />

Questions as to the admissibility, relevance, materiality and weight of evidence<br />

fall under the tribunal’s general power to conduct the arbitration as<br />

it considers appropriate.<br />

Witnesses<br />

Witnesses commonly give their evidence in chief through sworn written<br />

statements, and are then cross-examined under oath at the oral hearing.<br />

Experts<br />

Although the tribunal has the power, under article 26 of the Model Law, to<br />

appoint its own experts, the invariable practice in Canada is for parties to<br />

retain the experts. Parties are required to provide objective, independent<br />

expert opinion, without obvious bias in favour of the party that has retained<br />

him or her. Written expert reports are exchanged in advance of a hearing<br />

and delivered to the tribunal. In a recent decision (Highbury Estates Inc v<br />

Bre-Ex Limited, 2015 ONSC 4966), the Ontario Superior Court found that<br />

there is no unfairness giving rise to a ground to set aside an award where<br />

arbitrators with relevant expert qualifications prefer their own opinions<br />

over the opinions of an expert retained by a party, particularly when the<br />

arbitrator was selected in part because of those same qualifications.<br />

Documents<br />

In the interests of efficiency, tribunals will often ask the parties to deliver<br />

an agreed book of documents, failing which the tribunal can make preliminary<br />

rulings on authentication and relevance.<br />

Party evidence<br />

Parties and corporate officers are entitled and expected to testify if they<br />

have relevant evidence, and adverse inferences may be drawn by the tribunal<br />

if they do not.<br />

26 Court involvement<br />

In what instances can the arbitral tribunal request assistance<br />

from a court and in what instances may courts intervene?<br />

Pursuant to article 27 of the Model Law, the tribunal (or a party with the<br />

tribunal’s consent) may request the assistance of the courts in the taking of<br />

evidence. The IBA Rules of Taking Evidence in International Commercial<br />

<strong>Arbitration</strong> are commonly applied by agreement of the parties, or are otherwise<br />

looked to by the tribunal (and the courts) as persuasive guidance.<br />

For witnesses within the jurisdiction, the court may issue a summons<br />

to compel a witness to attend the arbitration and produce documents. For<br />

ex juris witnesses, applicable domestic legislation (such as the Ontario<br />

Evidence Act) provides that the court may issue letters of request directed<br />

to the court in the jurisdiction where the witness is situated for assistance<br />

in taking evidence.<br />

27 Confidentiality<br />

Is confidentiality ensured?<br />

Parties to Canadian arbitrations generally provide for broad terms of<br />

confidentiality in the arbitration agreement itself. Failing any agreement,<br />

confidentiality may be a feature of the procedural rules (institutional or<br />

otherwise), or may be ordered by the tribunal.<br />

Canadian courts have not accepted, as a general proposition, that<br />

confidentiality is an implied term of an arbitration agreement. As noted<br />

above, among the common law jurisdictions, only British Columbia’s<br />

International Commercial <strong>Arbitration</strong> Act requires oral hearings to be held<br />

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in private. On the contrary, in Quebec, the Court of Appeal has ruled that<br />

there is no implicit duty of confidentiality in that province.<br />

In the recent decision of Union Carbide Inc v Bombardier Inc, 2014<br />

SCC 35, the Supreme Court of Canada recognised that the public policy<br />

reasons that favour maintaining the confidentiality of settlement discussions<br />

and mediations are subject to some limits. In particular, the Court<br />

held that where parties wish to modify by agreement the default rules of<br />

confidentiality that may apply to their proceedings, they must do so clearly<br />

and explicitly. Other courts have also consistently held that even confidential<br />

proceedings may cease to be confidential once an arbitration award<br />

is brought into subsequent judicial proceedings (eg, on applications to<br />

enforce or set aside an award).<br />

Confidentiality will generally apply to the proceedings and information<br />

disclosed therein, to materials submitted to the tribunal and to the<br />

awards (final or interim) rendered. It should be noted that only the parties<br />

to the arbitration agreement themselves will be bound by any applicable<br />

confidentiality; separate agreements may be necessary to ensure that third<br />

parties, such as witnesses and experts, are also covered. Normally, the<br />

obligation of confidentiality is subject to exceptions when disclosure may<br />

be required by law, such as a disclosure in accordance with securities laws.<br />

Interim measures and sanctioning powers<br />

28 Interim measures by the courts<br />

What interim measures may be ordered by courts before and<br />

after arbitration proceedings have been initiated?<br />

According to the International <strong>Arbitration</strong> Acts, court intervention is prohibited<br />

except where provided in the Acts themselves. Article 9 of the<br />

Model Law, as implemented in Canada, permits parties to an arbitration to<br />

request interim measures from a court both before and during arbitral proceedings,<br />

without compromising the arbitration agreement. These interim<br />

measures can include injunctions to freeze assets or prevent actions being<br />

taken, including orders affecting third parties.<br />

29 Interim measures by an emergency arbitrator<br />

Does your domestic arbitration law or do the rules of the<br />

domestic arbitration institutions mentioned above provide for<br />

an emergency arbitrator prior to the constitution of the arbitral<br />

tribunal?<br />

The International <strong>Arbitration</strong> Acts do not provide for an emergency arbitrator,<br />

though there is nothing to prevent the parties from agreeing to such<br />

measures as part of their arbitration agreement or to adopt procedural<br />

rules that have emergency provisions.<br />

The ADR Chambers <strong>Arbitration</strong> Rules and the <strong>Arbitration</strong> Rules of the<br />

ADR Institute of Canada both provide for emergency interim measures<br />

prior to the constitution of the arbitral tribunal.<br />

30 Interim measures by the arbitral tribunal<br />

What interim measures may the arbitral tribunal order after<br />

it is constituted? In which instances can security for costs be<br />

ordered by an arbitral tribunal?<br />

Arbitral tribunals in Canada’s common law jurisdictions may order interim<br />

measures as it deems necessary relating to the subject matter of the dispute<br />

and the preservation of evidence. In a 2012 decision (Nearctic Nickel Mines<br />

Inc v Canadian Royalties Inc, 2012 QCCA 385), the Quebec Court of Appeal<br />

confirmed that arbitral tribunals have the power to grant interim measures,<br />

even when the arbitration agreement is silent on the issue. Although arbitrators<br />

in Quebec do not have the power to order injunctive relief (as it is<br />

reserved to the courts), the Court of Appeal rejected the assertion that arbitrators<br />

can never have the power to issue orders of ‘an injunctive nature’,<br />

such as specific performance. Arbitrators in provinces other than Quebec<br />

have the power to order injunctive relief and other interim measures in<br />

accordance with the International <strong>Arbitration</strong> Acts.<br />

In any event, the common practice in Canada is for parties to instead<br />

apply directly to the court for interim relief, particularly where the arbitration<br />

agreement does not specifically grant the arbitral tribunal such powers.<br />

Security for costs are typically granted in the form of deposits or<br />

advances to secure arbitrator fees. Security for costs in respect of legal<br />

fees are not addressed in the International <strong>Arbitration</strong> Acts, and may be<br />

granted only where the tribunal is given the authority to do so in the arbitration<br />

agreement or under the applicable procedural rules.<br />

31 Sanctioning powers of the arbitral tribunal<br />

Pursuant to your domestic arbitration law or the rules of the<br />

domestic arbitration institutions mentioned above, is the<br />

arbitral tribunal competent to order sanctions against parties<br />

or their counsel who use ‘guerrilla tactics’ in arbitration? May<br />

counsel be subject to sanctions by the arbitral tribunal or<br />

domestic arbitral institutions?<br />

The International <strong>Arbitration</strong> Acts do not specifically address an arbitral<br />

tribunal’s power to order sanctions against parties or their counsel.<br />

Conduct that leads to unnecessary delays and other more serious infractions<br />

that obstruct or endanger the integrity of arbitral proceedings are<br />

generally addressed in Canada by means of costs awards. As discussed in<br />

question 39, unless there is an agreement in place to the contrary, international<br />

arbitral tribunals seated in Canada are empowered to award costs.<br />

The ADR Chambers <strong>Arbitration</strong> Rules provide that where a party fails<br />

to comply with the rules or any order of the tribunal, the tribunal is empowered<br />

to ‘impose a remedy it deems just, including an award on default’.<br />

Awards<br />

32 Decisions by the arbitral tribunal<br />

Failing party agreement, is it sufficient if decisions by the<br />

arbitral tribunal are made by a majority of all its members or is<br />

a unanimous vote required? What are the consequences for the<br />

award if an arbitrator dissents?<br />

Pursuant to article 29 of the Model Law, unanimity is not required. A<br />

majority governs, but a dissenting arbitrator may refuse to sign and date an<br />

award rendered by the tribunal. However, pursuant to article 31, the refusal<br />

to sign, for any reason, must be explained in the written award.<br />

33 Dissenting opinions<br />

How does your domestic arbitration law deal with dissenting<br />

opinions?<br />

The International <strong>Arbitration</strong> Acts do not address dissenting opinions.<br />

In practice, there are conflicting views as to whether dissenting opinions<br />

should form part of the award; at the very least, the fact of a dissent should<br />

be noted in the award. In Quebec, dissenting opinions are allowed, and the<br />

Civil Code provides that they form an integral part of the award.<br />

34 Form and content requirements<br />

What form and content requirements exist for an award?<br />

Article 31 of the Model Law prescribes requirements for the form and content<br />

of an award. An award must:<br />

• be in writing;<br />

• be signed by the arbitrators (or by a majority of the tribunal, provided<br />

that the reason for the missing signatures is stated in the award);<br />

• state the reasons upon which it is based, unless otherwise agreed by<br />

the parties that no reasons are necessary;<br />

• state the date and place of the award; and<br />

• be delivered to each party.<br />

In order to ensure its enforceability, an award should also adhere to the<br />

form and content requirements prescribed in the New York Convention.<br />

35 Time limit for award<br />

Does the award have to be rendered within a certain time limit<br />

under your domestic arbitration law or under the rules of the<br />

domestic arbitration institutions mentioned above?<br />

The International <strong>Arbitration</strong> Acts do not prescribe any time limit for the<br />

delivery of an award. Parties may impose a time limit on the tribunal as<br />

part of the arbitration agreement, and the procedural rules of leading<br />

Canadian institutions also prescribe time limits for delivery of an award.<br />

In particular, the <strong>Arbitration</strong> Rules of the ADR Institute of Canada provide<br />

that all final awards must be made within 60 days after hearings have<br />

closed, and the ADR Chambers <strong>Arbitration</strong> Rules provide that the award<br />

shall be rendered within 25 days after the close of proceedings. Under these<br />

institutional rules, the parties may also agree to extend the time limit for<br />

the rendering of an award.<br />

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The British Columbia Supreme Court, in Ben 102 Enterprises Ltd v Ben<br />

105 Enterprises Ltd, 2014 BCSC 64, held that an arbitrator is entitled to<br />

delay the release of a final award until all outstanding fees are paid.<br />

36 Date of award<br />

For what time limits is the date of the award decisive and for<br />

what time limits is the date of delivery of the award decisive?<br />

Unless agreed otherwise, a party has 30 days from the receipt of an award<br />

to request clerical or typographical corrections from the tribunal, or to seek<br />

an interpretation of a specific part of the award. An application to the court<br />

to set aside an award must be made no later than three months after it is<br />

received.<br />

37 Types of awards<br />

What types of awards are possible and what types of relief may<br />

the arbitral tribunal grant?<br />

Although not specifically addressed in any of the International <strong>Arbitration</strong><br />

Acts (save for British Columbia’s), interim and partial awards are commonly<br />

rendered in Canada. The Model Law also provides that an award<br />

on agreed terms shall be rendered subject to the same requirements as any<br />

other award.<br />

Arbitrators in Quebec may also render partial or interim awards, but as<br />

noted above, these may not amount to injunctive relief, which is reserved<br />

to the Superior Court.<br />

Article 33 of the Model Law provides that following receipt of a final<br />

award, a party may request an additional award in respect of claims that<br />

were presented during the proceedings but which were omitted from the<br />

final award.<br />

38 Termination of proceedings<br />

By what other means than an award can proceedings be<br />

terminated?<br />

Where a claimant fails to deliver a statement of claim in a timely fashion,<br />

the tribunal shall terminate the proceedings, unless otherwise agreed by<br />

the parties. The Model Law also requires the tribunal to terminate proceedings<br />

where: the claimant withdraws its claim (unless the respondent has a<br />

legitimate interest in continuing); the parties agree; or the tribunal finds<br />

the continuation of proceedings unnecessary or impossible.<br />

In circumstances where a settlement is reached during the course of<br />

proceedings, the tribunal must terminate the proceedings, and may record<br />

that settlement in the form of an award if so requested by the parties. Most<br />

Canadian jurisdictions, in implementing the Model Law, have added that<br />

the tribunal may encourage a settlement, and with the agreement of the<br />

parties, may ‘use mediation, conciliation or other procedures’ at any time<br />

during the proceedings without being disqualified from resuming the role<br />

of arbitrator.<br />

39 Cost allocation and recovery<br />

How are the costs of the arbitral proceedings allocated in<br />

awards? What costs are recoverable?<br />

Cost allocation is not addressed in the International <strong>Arbitration</strong> Acts, save<br />

for the British Columbia Act, which specifically provides that the costs of an<br />

arbitration are in the discretion of the tribunal, and may include legal fees,<br />

arbitrator fees, institutional administration fees and ‘any other expenses<br />

incurred in connection’ with the proceedings.<br />

Even without this express language, arbitrators in other Canadian<br />

jurisdictions routinely award costs, finding jurisdiction to do so either<br />

through the arbitration agreement, applicable institutional rules or a recognised<br />

equitable right to award costs as justice requires. In keeping with<br />

the rules for cost allocation applicable in Canadian courts, costs are typically<br />

awarded on a ‘loser pays’ basis, with apportionment possible where<br />

success is divided.<br />

40 Interest<br />

May interest be awarded for principal claims and for costs and<br />

at what rate?<br />

The awarding of interest, either on principal claims or costs, is not<br />

addressed in the International <strong>Arbitration</strong> Acts, save for the British<br />

Columbia Act that expressly provides that tribunals may award interest.<br />

Tribunals in other Canadian jurisdictions, however, routinely award<br />

interest where the power to do so is found in the provisions of the underlying<br />

contract at issue, the arbitration agreement, the applicable institutional<br />

rules, or the law governing the substance of the dispute. The rate is<br />

normally a commercial rate in relation to the Bank of Canada prime rate,<br />

unless otherwise expressly provided for in the underlying contract.<br />

Proceedings subsequent to issuance of an award<br />

41 Interpretation and correction of awards<br />

Does the arbitral tribunal have the power to correct or interpret<br />

an award on its own or at the parties’ initiative? What time<br />

limits apply?<br />

Pursuant to article 33 of the Model Law, a party has 30 days from the date<br />

of receipt of the award to request corrections of any typographical, computational<br />

or clerical errors, or to seek an interpretation of a specific part of<br />

the award from the tribunal. The tribunal may also correct errors and issue<br />

clarifications on its own initiative, subject to the same 30-day time limit.<br />

42 Challenge of awards<br />

How and on what grounds can awards be challenged and set<br />

aside?<br />

The International <strong>Arbitration</strong> Acts prescribe a limited number of grounds<br />

upon which applications to set aside an award may be made to the courts.<br />

In general, Canadian courts show significant deference to arbitral tribunals,<br />

and pursuant to article 34 of the Model Law will only set aside an<br />

award where it is proven that:<br />

• a party was under some incapacity;<br />

• the arbitration agreement was invalid under the applicable law;<br />

• the party making the application to set aside an award was not given<br />

proper notice of an arbitrator’s appointment or the arbitral proceedings,<br />

or was otherwise unable to present his or her case;<br />

• the award deals with a dispute not contemplated in the submission to<br />

arbitration; or<br />

• the arbitral tribunal or the applicable procedure was not in accordance<br />

with the agreement of the parties.<br />

The award may also be set aside where the court finds that the subject matter<br />

of the dispute itself is not arbitrable, or where the award conflicts with<br />

a public policy, as supported by a specific law of the Canadian jurisdiction<br />

at issue. On an application to set aside an award, the court has discretion to<br />

stay the underlying arbitration proceedings.<br />

43 Levels of appeal<br />

How many levels of appeal are there? How long does it<br />

generally take until a challenge is decided at each level?<br />

Approximately what costs are incurred at each level? How are<br />

costs apportioned among the parties?<br />

Awards made in international arbitrations seated in Canada are generally<br />

not subject to appeal. In the limited circumstances prescribed in the<br />

International <strong>Arbitration</strong> Acts where a party may bring a challenge before<br />

the courts (eg, a challenge to the tribunal’s jurisdiction or to the appointment<br />

of an arbitrator), the Acts specifically provide that the court’s decision<br />

is not subject to further appeal.<br />

In other instances where arbitral proceedings may come before the<br />

courts, however, for example on an application to enforce or set aside an<br />

award, the Canadian judicial system generally consists of three levels of<br />

court: a provincial superior court of first instance; a provincial court of<br />

appeal; and finally the Supreme Court of Canada. Leave to appeal to the<br />

court of appeal is required in some instances, and leave to the Supreme<br />

Court of Canada is always needed, except in criminal matters.<br />

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Update and trends<br />

The number of international trade and investment treaties to which<br />

Canada is a party has increased markedly in recent years. As noted in<br />

question 2, most of these bilateral investment treaties and free trade<br />

agreements contain investment arbitration provisions. With Canada’s<br />

recent ratification of the ICSID Convention, and the signing of the<br />

Trans-Pacific Partnership and the European Union Comprehensive<br />

Economic and Trade Agreement, the trend of Canada’s growing<br />

involvement in international investment arbitration looks likely to<br />

accelerate.<br />

Legislative review of the International <strong>Arbitration</strong> Acts continues<br />

to be an issue of discussion in Canadian legal circles. At its 2014 annual<br />

meeting, the Uniform Law Conference of Canada adopted the final<br />

Report of a Task Force on the Model Law Amendments, which included<br />

a proposed new uniform International Commercial <strong>Arbitration</strong> Act, and<br />

called for its implementation throughout Canada. The new uniform<br />

Act adopts the 2006 Model Law amendments, and aims at eliminating<br />

the variety of small discrepancies that currently exist as between the<br />

International <strong>Arbitration</strong> Acts.<br />

In Quebec, the legislature passed comprehensive amendments<br />

to that province’s Code of Civil Procedure in 2014, with the changes<br />

expected to come into force in January 2016. Among numerous other<br />

changes, the new Code of Civil Procedure requires that parties –<br />

including public entities – consider recourse to private forms of dispute<br />

resolution (such as mediation and arbitration), and codifies many<br />

procedural rules applicable to arbitral proceedings in Quebec.<br />

A number of recent judicial decisions not mentioned in this<br />

chapter have also strengthened Canada’s position as an arbitrationfriendly<br />

jurisdiction. In particular, in Sattva Capital Corp. v Creston Moly<br />

Corp., 2014 SCC 53, the Supreme Court of Canada confirmed (albeit<br />

in the context of a domestic arbitration) that significant deference<br />

is owed to the decisions of arbitrators, and that a review standard of<br />

‘reasonableness’ rather than ‘correctness’ applies when those decisions<br />

are appealed to the courts. In Depo Traffic v Vikeda International, 2015<br />

ONSC 999, the Ontario Superior Court of Justice, in granting an order<br />

for recognition and enforcement of a foreign arbitral award, emphasised<br />

the importance of the ‘principle of non-judicial intervention in arbitral<br />

awards’. In Popack v Lipszyc, 2015 ONSC 3460, in the face of evidence<br />

that grounds to set aside an arbitral award (from an international<br />

tribunal seated in Ontario) under article 34 of the Model Law had been<br />

met, the Ontario Superior Court of Justice refused to do so. The Court<br />

reasoned that given the principles and objectives which underpin the<br />

Model Law (namely party autonomy and the respect owed to tribunals),<br />

an application to set aside an award must be weighed against the<br />

prejudice that would result to both parties if such an order were granted.<br />

The Court determined that the annulment or setting aside of an award<br />

was discretionary and that the particular due process issue in that case<br />

(the tribunal spoke to a witness in the absence of the parties, but with<br />

the agreement of the parties) did not outweigh the prejudice of setting<br />

aside the award.<br />

Times vary from province to province, but in general, an appeal can<br />

take from six to 12 months, with even longer time frames expected when<br />

appealing to the Supreme Court of Canada.<br />

Costs depend largely on the length and complexity of the case, and<br />

on tariffs that differ in each Canadian jurisdiction. As noted above, cost<br />

awards in Canada follow the ‘loser pays’ principle, and may be apportioned<br />

according to mixed success.<br />

44 Recognition and enforcement<br />

What requirements exist for recognition and enforcement of<br />

domestic and foreign awards, what grounds exist for refusing<br />

recognition and enforcement, and what is the procedure?<br />

For the purposes of recognition and enforcement under the Model Law, the<br />

award must be commercial and international as those terms are defined in<br />

the International <strong>Arbitration</strong> Acts. In Ontario, however, an arbitral award<br />

will include commercial arbitral awards made outside of Canada, even if<br />

the arbitration itself was not international. Article 36 of the Model Law<br />

prescribes the grounds for refusing recognition and enforcement of an<br />

award, and these are very similar to the grounds available for setting aside<br />

an award.<br />

In Canada, the task of enforcement is left to the courts: once recognised,<br />

an arbitral award is enforceable in the same manner as a judgment<br />

of the court. Canadian courts generally look favourably on the enforcement<br />

of foreign arbitral awards. A recent decision of the Supreme Court<br />

of Canada, Chevron Corp v Yaiguaje, 2015 SCC 42, clarified the state of<br />

the law with regard to the recognition and enforcement of foreign judicial<br />

decisions, and this in turn may influence the approach applicable to<br />

arbitral awards. In particular, the Supreme Court held that the absence of<br />

recoverable judgment debtor assets in Canada does not, by itself, preclude<br />

a Canadian court from exercising jurisdiction in recognition and enforcement<br />

proceedings. Also, the Supreme Court confirmed that there need not<br />

be any ‘real and substantial connection’ between the Canadian court and<br />

the foreign court or the subject matter of the dispute.<br />

45 Enforcement of foreign awards<br />

What is the attitude of domestic courts to the enforcement<br />

of foreign awards set aside by the courts at the place of<br />

arbitration?<br />

Pursuant to Article 36 of the Model Law, Canadian courts will generally not<br />

enforce foreign arbitral awards that have been set aside by the courts at the<br />

place of arbitration, although they retain the judicial discretion to do so. In<br />

Stans Energy Corp. v Kyrgyz Republic, 2015 ONSC 3236, the Ontario Divisional<br />

Court recently set aside an ongoing Mareva injunction in part on the basis<br />

that the underlying foreign award had been set aside by a Russian court.<br />

46 Enforcement of orders by emergency arbitrators<br />

Does your domestic arbitration legislation, case law or the<br />

rules of domestic arbitration institutions provide for the<br />

enforcement of orders by emergency arbitrators?<br />

The International <strong>Arbitration</strong> Acts do not address the enforcement of<br />

orders issued by emergency arbitrators, nor has the issue been considered<br />

by Canadian courts.<br />

The <strong>Arbitration</strong> Rules of the ADR Institute of Canada, provide that the<br />

emergency arbitrator’s decision ‘must be in the form of an order’, whereas<br />

the ADR Chambers <strong>Arbitration</strong> Rules provide that an emergency arbitrator<br />

may enter an ‘interim award’. Arguably, only an award is enforceable pursuant<br />

to the terms of the Model Law and the New York Convention.<br />

47 Cost of enforcement<br />

What costs are incurred in enforcing awards?<br />

Recognition and enforcement proceedings are commenced by way of<br />

applications to the court, which generally proceed in writing supported by<br />

affidavit evidence. The costs involved include filing fees and associated<br />

legal fees, which are heavily dependent on the complexity of the application<br />

and whether there are contested issues regarding enforcement.<br />

Once recognised, the award can be enforced through the full range of<br />

remedies available for execution of court judgments, which in turn carry<br />

their own (fact-dependent) costs.<br />

Other<br />

48 Judicial system influence<br />

What dominant features of your judicial system might exert an<br />

influence on an arbitrator from your country?<br />

The influence exerted by the Canadian judicial system on Canadian<br />

arbitrators is, in general, favourable towards arbitration. This influence<br />

includes a deference towards arbitrators, a flexible approach to procedural<br />

rules in the ultimate interests of fairness and efficiency, and respect for<br />

underlying principles of natural justice and the rule of law.<br />

In particular, Canada’s judicial system generally entails pre-hearing<br />

documentary productions and oral discovery of a single witness per party,<br />

subject to time limits and the rules of privilege. US-style discovery involving<br />

the deposition of numerous witnesses is prohibited. In the arbitration<br />

context, however, pre-hearing oral discoveries are rarely seen; witness<br />

statements are common, and hearings are typically restricted to crossexaminations.<br />

In both the judicial and arbitration context, individual<br />

parties and corporate officers may be expected to testify if they are in a<br />

position to provide relevant and probative evidence (and an adverse inference<br />

may be drawn if they do not).<br />

www.gettingthedealthrough.com 73<br />

© Law Business Research 2016


CANADA<br />

<strong>Arbitration</strong> Place<br />

49 Professional or ethical rules applicable to counsel<br />

Are specific professional or ethical rules applicable to counsel<br />

in international arbitration in your country? Does best practice<br />

in your country reflect (or contradict) the IBA Guidelines on<br />

Party Representation in International <strong>Arbitration</strong>?<br />

The conduct of Canadian counsel is regulated by the rules of professional<br />

conduct of the respective provincial law societies. Foreign counsel and<br />

arbitrators may appear in Canadian-seated arbitrations without restriction.<br />

While there has been some ambiguity on the scope of some provincial<br />

law society rules, Ontario’s law society has recently confirmed that its<br />

professional rules do not affect foreign arbitration practitioners with cases<br />

in that province. British Columbia and Quebec also enacted regulations to<br />

the same effect.<br />

50 Regulation of activities<br />

What particularities exist in your jurisdiction that a foreign<br />

practitioner should be aware of ?<br />

Foreign counsel and foreign arbitrators arriving for an international arbitration<br />

seated in Canada must possess the normal travel documents from<br />

their country of origin, which may include a visa. A Canadian work permit<br />

would not normally be required to appear on a single case. A foreign arbitration<br />

practitioner entering Canada is advised to carry a letter of invitation<br />

confirming that their attendance in Canada is necessary for the conduct<br />

of a Canada-seated arbitration. Foreign counsel and foreign arbitrators in<br />

an international arbitration are generally not subject to applicable valueadded<br />

taxes.<br />

John Judge<br />

Daniel Dawalibi<br />

Bay Adelaide Centre, 333 Bay Street, Suite 900<br />

Toronto<br />

Ontario<br />

M5H 2T4<br />

Canada<br />

jjudge@arbitrationplace.com<br />

ddawalibi@arbitrationplace.com<br />

Tel: +1 416 848 0203<br />

Fax: +1 416 850 5316<br />

www.arbitrationplace.com<br />

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