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European
Convention on
International Commercial Arbitration
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Done at Geneva, 21 April 1961
Entered into force, 1 January 1964
United Nations Treaty Series, vol. 484, p. 364 No. 7041 (1963-1964)
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Preamble
The undersigned, duly authorized, Convened under the auspices of the
Economic Commission for Europe of the United Nations, Having noted
that on 10th June 1958 at the United Nations Conference on
International Commercial Arbitration has been signed in New York a
Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral
Awards, Desirous of promoting the development of European trade by,
as far as possible, removing certain difficulties that may impede
the organization and operation of international commercial
arbitration in relations between physical or legal persons of
different European countries, Have agreed on the following
provisions: |
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Article I - Scope of the
Convention
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This Convention shall apply:
(a) to arbitration agreements concluded for the purpose of
settling disputes arising from international trade between
physical or legal persons having, when concluding the agreement,
their habitual place of residence or their seat in different
Contracting States;
(b) to arbitral procedures and awards based on agreements
referred to in paragraph 1(a) above.
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For the purpose of this Convention,
(a) the term "arbitration agreement" shall mean either an
arbitral clause in a contract or an arbitration agreement being
signed by the parties, or contained in an exchange of letters,
telegrams, or in a communication by teleprinter and, in
relations between States whose laws do not require that an
arbitration agreement be made in writing, any arbitration
agreement concluded in the form authorized by these laws;
(b) the term "arbitration" shall mean not only settlement by
arbitrators appointed for each case (ad hoc arbitration) but
also by permanent arbitral institutions;
(c) the term "seat" shall mean the place of the situation of the
establishment that has made the arbitration agreement.
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Article II - Right of
legal persons of public law to resort to arbitration
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In the cases referred to in Article I,
paragraph 1, of this Convention, legal persons considered by the
law which is applicable to them as "legal persons of public law"
have the right to conclude valid arbitration agreements.
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On signing, ratifying or acceding to
this Convention any State shall be entitled to declare that it
limits the above faculty to such conditions as may be stated in
its declaration.
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Article III - Right of
foreign nationals to be designated as arbitrators
In arbitration covered by this Convention, foreign nationals may be
designated as arbitrators. |
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Article IV -
Organization of the arbitration
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The parties to an arbitration
agreement shall be free to submit their disputes:
(a) to a permanent arbitral institution; in this case, the
arbitration proceedings shall be held in conformity with the
rules of the said institution;
(b) to an ad hoc arbitral procedure; in this case, they shall be
free inter alia
(i) to appoint arbitrators or to establish means for their
appointment in the event of an actual dispute;
(ii) to determine the place of arbitration; and
(iii) to lay down the procedure to be followed by the
arbitrators.
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Where the parties have agreed to
submit any disputes to an ad hoc arbitration, and where within
thirty days of the notification of the request for arbitration
to the respondent one of the parties fails to appoint his
arbitrator, the latter shall, unless otherwise provided, be
appointed at the request of the other party by the President of
the competent Chamber of Commerce of the country of the
defaulting party's habitual place of residence or seat at the
time of the introduction of the request for arbitration. This
paragraph shall also apply to the replacement of the
arbitrator(s) appointed by one of the parties or by the
President of the Chamber of Commerce above referred to.
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Where the parties have agreed to
submit any disputes to an ad hoc arbitration by one or more
arbitrators and the arbitration agreement contains no indication
regarding the organization of the arbitration, as mentioned in
paragraph 1 of this article, the necessary steps shall be taken
by the arbitrator(s) already appointed, unless the parties are
able to agree thereon and without prejudice to the case referred
to in paragraph 2 above. Where the parties cannot agree on the
appointment of the sole arbitrator or where the arbitrators
appointed cannot agree on the measures to be taken, the claimant
shall apply for the necessary action, where the place of
arbitration has been agreed upon by the parties, at his option
to the President of the Chamber of Commerce of the place of
arbitration agreed upon or to the President of the competent
Chamber of Commerce of the respondent's habitual place of
residence or seat at the time of the introduction of the request
for arbitration. Where such a place has not been agreed upon,
the claimant shall be entitled at his option to apply for the
necessary action either to the President of the competent
Chamber of Commerce of the country of the respondent's habitual
place of residence or seat at the time of the introduction of
the request for arbitration, or to the Special Committee whose
composition and procedure are specified in the Annex to this
Convention. Where the claimant fails to exercise the rights
given to him under this paragraph the respondent or the
arbitrator(s) shall be entitled to do so.
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When seized of a request the President
or the Special Committee shall be entitled as need be:
(a) to appoint the sole arbitrator, presiding arbitrator,
umpire, or referee;
(b) to replace the arbitrator(s) appointed under any procedure
other than that referred to in paragraph 2 above;
(c) to determine the place of arbitration, provided that the
arbitrator(s) may fix another place of arbitration;
(d) to establish directly or by reference to the rules and
statutes of a permanent arbitral institution the rules of
procedure to be followed by the arbitrator(s), provided that the
arbitrators have not established these rules themselves in the
absence of any agreement thereon between the parties.
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Where the parties have agreed to
submit their disputes to a permanent arbitral institution
without determining the institution in question and cannot agree
thereon, the claimant may request the determination of such
institution in conformity with the procedure referred to in
paragraph 3 above.
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Where the arbitration agreement does
not specify the mode of arbitration (arbitration by a permanent
arbitral institution or an ad hoc arbitration) to which the
parties have agreed to submit their dispute, and where the
parties cannot agree thereon, the claimant shall be entitled to
have recourse in this case to the procedure referred to in
paragraph 3 above to determine the question. The President of
the competent Chamber of Commerce or the Special Committee,
shall be entitled either to refer the parties to a permanent
arbitral institution or to request the parties to appoint their
arbitrators within such time-limits as the President of the
competent Chamber of Commerce or the Special Committee may have
fixed and to agree within such time-limits on the necessary
measures for the functioning of the arbitration. In the latter
case, the provisions of paragraphs 2, 3 and 4 of this Article
shall apply.
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Where within a period of sixty days
from the moment when he was requested to fulfil one of the
functions set out in paragraphs 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6 of this
Article, the President of the Chamber of Commerce designated by
virtue of these paragraphs has not fulfilled one of these
functions, the party requesting shall be entitled to ask the
Special Committee to do so.
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Article V - Plea as to
arbitral jurisdiction
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The party which intends to raise a plea as to the arbitrator's
jurisdiction based on the fact that the arbitration agreement
was either non-existent or null and void or had lapsed shall do
so during the arbitration proceedings, not later than the
delivery of its statement of claim or defence relating to the
substance of the dispute; those based on the fact that an
arbitrator has exceeded his terms of reference shall be raised
during the arbitration proceedings as soon as the question on
which the arbitrator is alleged to have no jurisdiction is
raised during the arbitral procedure. Where the delay in raising
the plea is due to a cause which the arbitrator deems justified,
the arbitrator shall declare the plea admissible.
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Pleas to the jurisdiction referred to in paragraph 1 above that
have not been raised during the time-limits there referred to,
may not be entered either during a subsequent stage of the
arbitral proceedings where they are pleas left to the sole
discretion of the parties under the law applicable by the
arbitrator, or during subsequent court proceedings concerning
the substance or the enforcement of the award where such pleas
are left to the discretion of the parties under the rule of
conflict of the court seized of the substance of the dispute or
the enforcement of the award. The arbitrator's decision on the
delay in raising the plea, will, however, be subject to judicial
control.
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Subject to any subsequent judicial control provided for under
the lex fori, the arbitrator whose jurisdiction is called in
question shall be entitled to proceed with the arbitration, to
rule on his own jurisdiction and to decide upon the existence or
the validity of the arbitration agreement or of the contract of
which the agreement forms part.
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Article VI -
Jurisdiction of Courts of Law
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A plea as to the jurisdiction of the court made before the court
seized by either party to the arbitration agreement, on the
basis of the fact that an arbitration agreement exists shall,
under penalty of estoppel, be presented by the respondent before
or at the same time as the presentation of his substantial
defence, depending upon whether the law of the court seized
regards this plea as one of procedure or of substance.
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In taking a decision concerning the existence or the validity of
an arbitration agreement, courts of Contracting States shall
examine the validity of such agreement with reference to the
capacity of the parties, under the law applicable to them, and
with reference to other questions
(a) under the law to which the parties have subjected their
arbitration agreement;
(b) failing any indication thereon, under the law of the country
in which the award is to be made;
(c) failing any indication as to the law to which the parties
have subjected the agreement, and where at the time when the
question is raised in court the country in which the award is to
be made cannot be determined, under the competent law by virtue
of the rules of conflict of the court seized of the dispute.
The courts may also refuse recognition of the arbitration
agreement if under the law of their country the dispute is not
capable of settlement by arbitration.
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Where either party to an arbitration agreement has initiated
arbitration proceedings before any resort is had to a court,
courts of Contracting States subsequently asked to deal with the
same subject-matter between the same parties or with the
question whether the arbitration agreement was non-existent or
null and void or had lapsed, shall stay their ruling on the
arbitrator's jurisdiction until the arbitral award is made,
unless they have good and substantial reasons to the contrary.
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A request for interim measures or measures of conservation
addressed to a judicial authority shall not be deemed
incompatible with the arbitration agreement, or regarded as a
submission of the substance of the case to the court.
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Article VII -
Applicable Law
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The parties shall be free to determine, by agreement, the law to
be applied by the arbitrators to the substance of the dispute.
Failing any indication by the parties as to the applicable law,
the arbitrators shall apply the proper law under the rule of
conflict that the arbitrators deem applicable. In both cases the
arbitrators shall take account of the terms of the contract and
trade usages.
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The arbitrators shall act as amiables compositeurs if the
parties so decide and if they may do so under the law applicable
to the arbitration.
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Article VIII
- Reasons for the Award
The parties shall be presumed to have agreed that reasons shall
be given for the award unless they
(a) either expressly declare that reasons shall not be given; or
(b) have assented to an arbitral procedure under which it is not
customary to give reasons for awards, provided that in this case
neither party requests before the end of the hearing, or if there
has not been a hearing then before the making of the award, that
reasons be given. |
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Article IX - Setting
aside of the arbitral award
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The setting aside in a Contracting State of an arbitral award
covered by this Convention shall only constitute a ground for
the refusal of recognition or enforcement in another Contracting
State where such setting aside took place in a State in which,
or under the law of which, the award has been made and for one
of the following reasons:
(a) the parties to the arbitration agreement were under the law
applicable to them, under some incapacity or the said agreement
is not valid under the law to which the parties have subjected
it or, failing any indication thereon, under the law of the
country where the award was made, or
(b) the party requesting the setting aside of the award was not
given proper notice of the appointment of the arbitrator or of
the arbitration proceedings or was otherwise unable to present
his case; or
(c) the award deals with a difference not contemplated by or not
falling within the terms of the submission to arbitration, or it
contains decisions on matters beyond the scope of the submission
to arbitration, provided that, if the decisions on matters
submitted to arbitration can be separated from those not so
submitted, that part of the award which contains decisions on
matters submitted to arbitration need not be set aside;
(d) the composition of the arbitral authority or the arbitral
procedure was not in accordance with the agreement of the
parties, or failing such agreement, with the provisions of
Article IV of this Convention.
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In relations between Contracting States that are also parties to
the New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of
Foreign Arbitral Awards of 10th June 1958, paragraph 1 of this
Article limits the application of Article V(1)(e) of the New
York Convention solely to the cases of setting aside set out
under paragraph 1 above.
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Article X - Final
Clauses
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This Convention is open for signature or accession by countries
members of the Economic Commission for Europe and countries
admitted to the Commission in a consultative capacity under
paragraph 8 of the Commission's terms of reference.
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Such countries as may participate in certain activities of the
Economic Commission for Europe in accordance with paragraph 11
of the Commission's terms of reference may become Contracting
Parties to this Convention by acceding thereto after its entry
into force.
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The Convention shall be open for signature until 31 December
1961 inclusive. Thereafter, it shall be open for accession.
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This Convention shall be ratified.
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Ratification or accession shall be effected by the deposit of an
instrument with the Secretary-General of the United Nations.
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When signing, ratifying or acceding to this Convention, the
Contracting Parties shall communicate to the Secretary-General
of the United Nations a list of the Chambers of Commerce or
other institutions in their country who will exercise the
functions conferred by virtue of Article IV of this Convention
on Presidents of the competent Chambers of Commerce.
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The provisions of the present Convention shall not affect the
validity of multilateral or bilateral agreements concerning
arbitration entered into by Contracting States.
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This Convention shall come into force on the ninetieth day after
five of the countries referred to in paragraph 1 above have
deposited their instruments of ratification or accession. For
any country ratifying or acceding to it later this Convention
shall enter into force on the ninetieth day after the said
country has deposited its instrument of ratification or
accession.
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Any Contracting Party may denounce this Convention by so
notifying the Secretary-General of the United Nations.
Denunciation shall take effect twelve months after the date of
receipt by the Secretary-General of the notification of
denunciation.
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If, after the entry into force of this Convention, the number of
Contracting Parties is reduced, as a result of denunciations, to
less than five, the Convention shall cease to be in force from
the date on which the last of such denunciations takes effect.
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The Secretary-General of the United Nations shall notify the
countries referred to in paragraph 1, and the countries which
have become Contracting Parties under paragraph 2 above, of
(a) declarations made under Article II, paragraph 2;
(b) ratifications and accessions under paragraphs 1 and 2 above;
(c) communications received in pursuance of paragraph 6 above;
(d) the dates of entry into force of this Convention in
accordance with paragraph 8 above;
(e) denunciations under paragraph 9 above;
(f) the termination of this Convention in accordance with
paragraph 10 above.
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After 31 December 1961, the original of this Convention shall be
deposited with the Secretary-General of the United Nations, who
shall transmit certified true copies to each of the countries
mentioned in paragraphs 1 and 2 above.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF the undersigned, being duly authorized thereto,
have signed this Convention.
DONE at Geneva, this twenty-first day of April, one thousand nine
hundred
and sixty-one, in a single copy in the English, French and Russian
languages,
each text being equally authentic. |