The Enforcement of International Arbitration Agreements and Referral Applications in the NAFTA Region - Commercial Mediation and Arbitration in the NAFTA Countries
Author(s):
Pierre A. E. Bienvenu
Page Count:
26 pages
Published:
November, 1999
Practice Areas:
Author Detail:
Pierre Bienvenue is a partner of Ogilvy Renault practicing in the firm's Montreal office. He has been a member of the Litigation Group since 1983 and is a member of the Firm's Management Committee. Mr. Bienvenue has acted as counsel in numerous domestic and international commercial arbitration cases, both ad hoc and institutional.
Description:
Originally from Commercial Mediation and Arbitration in the NAFTA Countries
Preview Page
INTRODUCTION
The current widespread enforceability of arbitration agreements is arguably one of the most important factors having contributed to the development of international commercial arbitration as the preferred method of dispute settlement in international trade1. Such recognition is, after all, the backbone of arbitration as a means of resolving disputes since it ensures that parties having agreed to resort to arbitration will be held to their bargain. Indeed, it has been said that the enforcement of arbitration agreements reflects a transnational rule of international commercial arbitration2.
What is now taken for granted among most trading nations was - even recently - not so widely accepted. To use an example from the author's jurisdiction, in the Canadian Province of Quebec3, the clause compromissoire - or undertaking to refer future disputes to arbitration - had traditionally been held to be contrary to public policy and, as such, illegal and unenforceable4. Only agreements to refer existing disputes to arbitration were enforced by the courts of Quebec. In spite of amendments made in 1966 to Quebec's Code of Civil Procedure in order to reverse this jurisprudential trend, it was not until 1983 that the Supreme Court of Canada finally confirmed the validity and - importantly - the enforceability of the clause compromissoire under the law of Quebec5.
The role of the New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards (the "New York Convention") in fostering the use of arbitration to settle international commercial disputes cannot be overstated. While its title might suggest that it only relates to the recognition and enforcement of international arbitral awards, the New York Convention also enshrines in its second article the fundamental principle that arbitration agreements - whether they relate to existing or future disputes - are binding and must be given effect by the courts of Contracting States. Article II reads as follows: