World Arbitration Reporter (WAR) - 2nd Edition - Chile
Author(s):
Andrés Jana
Page Count:
84 pages
Media Description:
1 PDF Download
Published:
December, 2013
Jurisdictions:
Description:
Originally from World Arbitration Reporter (WAR) - 2nd Edition
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I. INTRODUCTION: ARBITRATION IN CHILE
HISTORY AND INFRASTRUCTURE
A. History and Current Legislation on Arbitration
1. Historical evolution of law relating to arbitration
Although there has been a favorable attitude towards arbitration
in Chile since its independence in 1810, there was no formal
recognition of arbitral tribunals in the first decades thereafter. It was
in Title XI of the Law for the Organization and Attribution of the
Judiciary of 1875 that arbitral tribunals were first recognized in
Chilean law. Later the Code of Civil Procedures of 1902 (CCP), in
force still today, included rules that governed the arbitral
proceedings under the title “Arbitral Proceedings” in Book III, Title
IX. Thereafter, in Law 7.421 of 1943 entitled Code of Judicial
Organization (CJO), provisions of the Law for the Organization and
Attribution of the Judiciary and other provisions governing
arbitration were merged into a unique text.
This is as far as special legislation on domestic arbitration goes
at present in Chile. Articles 222 to 243 of the CJO and Articles 628 to
644 of the CCP contain provisions dedicated specifically to
arbitration. In all matters not regulated by these provisions, the
ordinary rules of civil procedure apply.
Until 2004, the regime of the CJO and the CCP applied also to
international arbitrations. In September of 2004, Law 19.971 on
International Commercial Arbitration (ICAL) was enacted and came
to fill in several gaps left by the then existing regime, which was
conceived for domestic arbitration and was therefore inappropriate
for international cases. The major shift came in what concerns the
concept of arbitration, which went from a jurisdictional temporary
function to a procedure born out of the parties’ consent. As will be
shown throughout this country chapter, this difference permeates
many aspects of the proceedings between international and
domestic arbitration.