Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards
Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards | |
---|---|
Signed | 10 June 1958 |
Location | New York City, United States |
Effective | 7 June 1959 |
Condition | 3 ratifications |
Signatories | 24 |
Parties | 168 |
Depositaries | Secretary-General of the United Nations |
Languages | Arabic, Chinese, English, French, Russian and Spanish |
Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards at Wikisource |
The Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards, commonly known as the New York Convention, was adopted by a United Nations diplomatic conference on 10 June 1958 and entered into force on 7 June 1959. The Convention requires courts of contracting states to give effect to private agreements to arbitrate and to recognize and enforce arbitration awards made in other contracting states. Widely considered the foundational instrument for international arbitration, it applies to arbitrations that are not considered as domestic awards in the state where recognition and enforcement is sought.
The New York Convention is very successful. Nowadays many countries have adopted Arbitration laws based on the UNCITRAL Model Law on International Commercial Arbitration. This works with the New York Convention so that the provisions on making an enforceable award, or asking a court to set it aside or not enforce it, are the same under the Model Law and the New York Convention. The Model Law does not replace the NYC, it works with it. An award made in a country which is not a signatory to the NYC cannot take advantage of the Convention to enforce that award in the 168 Contracting States unless there is some bilateral recognition, whether or not the Arbitration was held under the provisions of the UNCITRAL Model Law.
Background[]
In 1953, the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) produced the first draft Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of International Arbitral Awards to the United Nations Economic and Social Council. With slight modifications, the Council submitted the convention to the International Conference in the Spring of 1958. The Conference was chaired by , the Dutch Permanent Representative to the United Nations and Oscar Schachter, a leading figure in international law who later taught at Columbia Law School and the Columbia School of International and Public Affairs, and served as the President of the American Society of International Law.
International arbitration is an increasingly popular means of alternative dispute resolution for cross-border commercial transactions. The primary advantage of arbitration over court litigation is enforceability: an arbitration award is enforceable in most countries in the world. Other advantages of arbitration include the ability to select a neutral forum to resolve disputes, that arbitration awards are final and not ordinarily subject to appeal, the ability to choose flexible procedures for the arbitration, and confidentiality.
Once a dispute between parties is settled, the winning party needs to collect the award or judgment. If the loser voluntarily pays, no court action is necessary.[1] Otherwise, unless the assets of the losing party are located in the country where the court judgment was rendered, the winning party needs to obtain a court judgment in the jurisdiction where the other party resides or where its assets are located. Unless there is a treaty on recognition of court judgments between the country where the judgment is rendered and the country where the winning party seeks to collect, the winning party will be unable to use the court judgment to collect.
Cases and statistics[]
Public information on overall and specific arbitration cases is quite limited as there is no need to involve the courts at all unless there is a dispute, and in most cases the loser pays voluntarily.[1] A review of disputed cases in China found that from 2000 to 2011, the Supreme People's Court upheld the refusal to enforce the arbitration agreement in 17 cases due to a provision in Article V (China has an automatic appeal system to the highest court, so this includes all such refusals).[2]
Summary of provisions[]
Under the Convention, an arbitration award issued in any other state can generally be freely enforced in any other contracting state, only subject to certain, limited defenses. These defenses are:[3]
- a party to the arbitration agreement was, under the law applicable to him, under some incapacity, or the arbitration agreement was not valid under its governing law;
- a party was not given proper notice of the appointment of the arbitrator or of the arbitration proceedings, or was otherwise unable to present its case;
- the award deals with an issue not contemplated by or not falling within the terms of the submission to arbitration, or contains matters beyond the scope of the arbitration (subject to the proviso that an award which contains decisions on such matters may be enforced to the extent that it contains decisions on matters submitted to arbitration which can be separated from those matters not so submitted);
- the composition of the arbitral tribunal was not in accordance with the agreement of the parties or, failing such agreement, with the law of the place where the hearing took place (the "lex loci arbitri");
- the award has not yet become binding upon the parties, or has been set aside or suspended by a competent authority, either in the country where the arbitration took place, or pursuant to the law of the arbitration agreement;
- the subject matter of the award was not capable of resolution by arbitration; or
- enforcement would be contrary to "public policy".
Wikisource has original text related to this article: |
Additionally, there are three types of reservations that countries may apply:[4]
- Conventional Reservation - some countries only enforce arbitration awards issued in a Convention member state
- Commercial Reservation – some countries only enforce arbitration awards that are related to commercial transactions
- Reciprocity reservation – some countries may choose not to limit the Convention to only awards from other contracting states, but may however limit application to awards from non-contracting states such that they will only apply it to the extent to which such a non-contracting state grants reciprocal treatment.
States may make any or all of the above reservations. Because there are two similar issues conflated under the term "reciprocity", it is important to determine which such reservation (or both) an enforcing state has made.
Parties to the Convention[]
As of May 2021, the Convention has 168 state parties, which includes 165 of the 193 United Nations member states plus the Cook Islands, the Holy See, and the State of Palestine. Thirty UN member states have not yet adopted the Convention. In addition, Taiwan has not been permitted to adopt the Convention (but generally enforces foreign arbitration judgments) and a number of British Overseas Territories have not had the Convention extended to them by Order in Council. British Overseas Territories to which the New York Convention has not yet been extended by Order in Council are: Anguilla, Falkland Islands, Turks and Caicos Islands, Montserrat, Saint Helena (including Ascension and Tristan da Cunha).
State | Date of Adoption | State | Date of Adoption |
---|---|---|---|
Afghanistan | 30 November 2005 | Albania | 27 June 2001 |
Algeria | 7 February 1989 | Andorra | 19 June 2015 |
Angola | 6 March 2017 | ||
Antigua and Barbuda | 2 February 1989 | Argentina | 14 March 1989 |
Armenia | 29 December 1997 | Australia | 26 March 1975 |
Austria | 2 May 1961 | Azerbaijan | 29 February 2000 |
Bahamas | 20 December 2006 | Bahrain | 6 April 1988 |
Bangladesh | 6 May 1992 | Barbados | 16 March 1993 |
Belarus | 15 November 1960 | Belgium | 18 August 1975 |
Belize | 15 March 2021 | ||
Benin | 16 May 1974 | Bhutan | 25 September 2014 |
Bolivia | 28 April 1995 | Bosnia and Herzegovina | 1 September 1993 |
Botswana | 20 December 1971 | Brazil | 7 June 2002 |
Brunei | 25 July 1996 | Bulgaria | 10 October 1961 |
Burkina Faso | 23 March 1987 | Burundi | 23 June 2014 |
Cambodia | 5 January 1960 | Cameroon | 19 February 1988 |
Canada | 12 May 1986 | Cape Verde | 22 March 2018 |
Central African Republic | 15 October 1962 | ||
Chile | 4 September 1975 | People's Republic of China | 22 January 1987 |
Colombia | 25 September 1979 | Democratic Republic of the Congo | 5 November 2014 |
Comoros | 28 April 2015 | Costa Rica | 26 October 1987 |
Côte d'Ivoire | 1 February 1991 | Cook Islands | 12 January 2009 |
Croatia | 26 July 1993 | Cuba | 30 December 1974 |
Cyprus | 29 December 1980 | Czech Republic | 30 September 1993 |
Denmark | 22 December 1972 | Djibouti | 14 June 1983 |
Dominica | 28 October 1988 | Dominican Republic | 11 April 2002 |
Ecuador | 3 January 1962 | Egypt | 9 March 1959 |
El Salvador | 10 June 1958 | Estonia | 30 August 1993 |
Ethiopia | 24 August 2020 | Fiji | 26 December 2010 |
Finland | 19 January 1962 | France | 26 June 1959 |
Gabon | 15 December 2006 | Georgia | 2 June 1994 |
Germany | 30 June 1961 | Ghana | 9 April 1968 |
Greece | 16 July 1962 | Guatemala | 21 March 1984 |
Guinea | 23 January 1991 | Guyana | 25 September 2014 |
Haiti | 5 December 1983 | Holy See | 14 May 1975 |
Honduras | 3 October 2000 | Hungary | 5 March 1962 |
Iceland | 24 January 2002 | India | 13 July 1960 |
Indonesia | 7 October 1981 | Iran, Islamic Republic of | 15 October 2001 |
Ireland | 12 May 1981 | Israel | 5 January 1959 |
Italy | 31 January 1969 | Jamaica | 10 July 2002 |
Japan | 20 June 1961 | Jordan | 15 November 1979 |
Kazakhstan | 20 November 1995 | Kenya | 10 February 1989 |
South Korea | 8 February 1973 | Kuwait | 28 April 1978 |
Kyrgyzstan | 18 December 1996 | Laos | 17 June 1998 |
Latvia | 14 April 1992 | Lebanon | 11 August 1998 |
Lesotho | 13 June 1989 | Liberia | 16 September 2005 |
Lithuania | 14 March 1995 | Liechtenstein | 5 October 2011 |
Luxembourg | 9 September 1983 | Republic of Macedonia | 10 March 1994 |
Madagascar | 16 July 1962 | Malaysia | 5 November 1985 |
Malawi | 4 March 2021 | Maldives | 17 September 2019 |
Mali | 8 September 1994 | Malta | 22 June 2000 |
Marshall Islands | 21 December 2006 | Mauritania | 30 January 1997 |
Mauritius | 19 June 1996 | Mexico | 14 April 1971 |
Moldova | 18 September 1998 | Monaco | 2 June 1982 |
Mongolia | 24 October 1994 | Montenegro | 23 October 2006 |
Morocco | 12 February 1959 | Mozambique | 11 June 1998 |
Myanmar | 16 April 2013 | Nepal | 4 March 1998 |
Netherlands | 24 April 1964 | New Zealand | 6 January 1983 |
Nicaragua | 24 September 2003 | Niger | 14 October 1964 |
Nigeria | 17 March 1970 | Norway | 14 March 1961 |
Oman | 25 February 1999 | ||
Pakistan | 14 July 2005 | Palau | 31 March 2020 |
Palestine | 2 January 2015 | Panama | 10 October 1984 |
Papua New Guinea | 17 July 2019 | Paraguay | 8 October 1997 |
Peru | 7 July 1988 | Philippines | 6 July 1967 |
Poland | 3 October 1961 | Portugal | 18 October 1994 |
Qatar | 30 December 2002 | Romania | 13 September 1961 |
Russia | 24 August 1960 | Rwanda | 31 October 2008 |
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines | 12 September 2000 | San Marino | 17 May 1979 |
Sao Tome and Principe | 20 November 2012 | Saudi Arabia | 19 April 1994 |
Senegal | 17 October 1994 | Serbia | 12 March 2001 |
Seychelles | 3 February 2020 | Sierra Leone | 28 October 2020 |
Singapore | 21 August 1986 | Slovakia | 28 May 1993 |
Slovenia | 6 July 1992 | South Africa | 3 May 1976 |
Spain | 12 May 1977 | Sri Lanka | 9 April 1962 |
Sudan | 26 March 2018 | Sweden | 28 January 1972 |
Switzerland | 1 June 1965 | Syria | 9 March 1959 |
Tanzania | 13 October 1964 | Tajikistan | 14 August 2012 |
Thailand | 21 December 1959 | Tonga | 12 June 2020 |
Trinidad and Tobago | 14 February 1966 | Tunisia | 17 July 1967 |
Turkey | 2 July 1992 | Uganda | 12 February 1992 |
Ukraine | 10 October 1960 | United Arab Emirates | 21 August 2006 |
United Kingdom | 24 September 1975 | United States | 30 September 1970 |
Uruguay | 30 March 1983 | Uzbekistan | 7 February 1996 |
Venezuela | 8 February 1995 | Vietnam | 12 September 1995 |
Zambia | 14 March 2002 | Zimbabwe | 26 September 1994 |
The Convention has also been extended to a number of British Crown Dependencies, Overseas Territories, Overseas departments, Unincorporated Territories and other subsidiary territories of sovereign states.
States which are not party to the Convention[]
Chad | Republic of the Congo | |
Equatorial Guinea | Eritrea | eSwatini formerly Swaziland |
Gambia | Grenada | Guinea-Bissau |
Iraq | Kiribati | Libya |
Federated States of Micronesia | Namibia | |
Nauru | Niue | North Korea |
Saint Kitts and Nevis | Saint Lucia | Samoa |
Solomon Islands | Somalia | South Sudan |
Suriname | Timor-Leste | Togo |
Turkmenistan | Tuvalu | Vanuatu |
Yemen |
United States issues[]
Under American law, the recognition of foreign arbitral awards is governed by chapter 2 of the Federal Arbitration Act, which incorporates the New York Convention.[5]
Therefore, the New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards (the "Convention") preempts state law. In , the Supreme Court held "Our constitution declares a treaty to be the law of the land. It is, consequently, to be regarded in courts of justice as equivalent to an act of the Legislature, whenever it operates of itself without the aid of any legislative provision."[6] Thus, over a course of 181 years, the United States Supreme Court has repeatedly held that a self-executing treaty is an act of the Legislature (i.e., act of Congress).
With specific regard to the New York Convention, at least one court discussed, but ultimately avoided, the issue of whether the treaty is self-executing. The court nonetheless held that the Convention was, at the least, an implemented non-self-executing treaty that still had legal force as a treaty (as distinguished from an Act of Congress).[7] Based on that determination, the court held that the Convention preempted state law that sought to void arbitration clauses in international reinsurance treaties.
See also[]
External links[]
- Uncitral
- 1958 New York Convention Guide (This website was developed by Shearman & Sterling and Columbia Law School, in cooperation with UNCITRAL)
- New York Convention, gives access to information regarding the New York Convention in general, its history, its interpretation and application by the courts
- Status. Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards (New York, 1958) (updated whenever the UNCITRAL Secretariat is informed of changes in status of the Convention.)
- The New York Convention on the UN Audiovisual Library of International Law, with an introductory note by Albert Jan van den Berg, video footage and photos related to the negotiations and adoption of the Convention.
- ICCA's Guide to the New York Convention (The International Council for Commercial Arbitration)
References[]
- ^ Jump up to: a b Argen, Robert (1 January 2015). "Ending Blind Spot Justice: Broadening the Transparency Trend in International Arbitration". Rochester, NY: Social Science Research Network. SSRN 2393188. Cite journal requires
|journal=
(help) - ^ Xia, Xiaohong (January 2011). ""Implementation of the New York Convention in China" by Xiaohong Xia". Arbitration Brief. 1 (1). Retrieved 21 March 2016.
- ^ ""Enforcement of Arbitral Awards under the New York Convention - Practic" by Joseph T. McLaughlin and Laurie Genevro". scholarship.law.berkeley.edu. Retrieved 21 March 2016.
- ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 20 June 2013. Retrieved 14 May 2014.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) New York Convention, 1958 - Reservations
- ^ "New York Arbitration" (PDF). CMS Legal. Retrieved 21 May 2012.
- ^ Foster v. Neilson, 27 U.S. 253, 314 (1829). See also Valentine v. U.S. ex rel. Neidecker, 57 S.Ct. 100, 103 (1936); Medellin v. Dretke, 125 S.Ct. 2088, 2103 (2005); Sanchez-Llamas v. Oregon, 126 S.Ct. 2669, 2695 (2006).
- ^ Safety National Casualty Corp. v. Certain Underwriters at Lloyd's, London, 587 F.3d 714 (5th Cir. 2009) (en banc), cert. den'd, 562 U.S. 827 (2010).
- United Nations treaties
- Arbitration treaties
- Treaties entered into force in 1959
- Treaties concluded in 1958
- Treaties of Afghanistan
- Treaties of Albania
- Treaties of Algeria
- Treaties of Andorra
- Treaties of Antigua and Barbuda
- Treaties of Argentina
- Treaties of Armenia
- Treaties of Australia
- Treaties of Austria
- Treaties of Azerbaijan
- Treaties of the Bahamas
- Treaties of Bahrain
- Treaties of Bangladesh
- Treaties of Barbados
- Treaties of the Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic
- Treaties of Belgium
- Treaties of the Republic of Dahomey
- Treaties of Bhutan
- Treaties of Bolivia
- Treaties of Bosnia and Herzegovina
- Treaties of Botswana
- Treaties of Brazil
- Treaties of Brunei
- Treaties of the People's Republic of Bulgaria
- Treaties of Burkina Faso
- Treaties of Myanmar
- Treaties of Burundi
- Treaties of the Kingdom of Cambodia (1953–1970)
- Treaties of Cameroon
- Treaties of Canada
- Treaties of the Central African Republic
- Treaties of Chile
- Treaties of the People's Republic of China
- Treaties of Colombia
- Treaties of the Comoros
- Treaties of the Democratic Republic of the Congo
- Treaties of the Cook Islands
- Treaties of Costa Rica
- Treaties of Ivory Coast
- Treaties of Croatia
- Treaties of Cuba
- Treaties of Cyprus
- Treaties of the Czech Republic
- Treaties of Czechoslovakia
- Treaties of Denmark
- Treaties of Djibouti
- Treaties of Dominica
- Treaties of the Dominican Republic
- Treaties of Ecuador
- Treaties of El Salvador
- Treaties of Estonia
- Treaties of Fiji
- Treaties of Finland
- Treaties of France
- Treaties of Gabon
- Treaties of Georgia (country)
- Treaties of West Germany
- Treaties of East Germany
- Treaties of Ghana
- Treaties of the Kingdom of Greece
- Treaties of Guatemala
- Treaties of Guinea
- Treaties of Guyana
- Treaties of Haiti
- Treaties of the Holy See
- Treaties of Honduras
- Treaties of the Hungarian People's Republic
- Treaties of Iceland
- Treaties of India
- Treaties of Indonesia
- Treaties of Iran
- Treaties of Ireland
- Treaties of Israel
- Treaties of Italy
- Treaties of Jamaica
- Treaties of Japan
- Treaties of Jordan
- Treaties of Kazakhstan
- Treaties of Kenya
- Treaties of Kuwait
- Treaties of Kyrgyzstan
- Treaties of Laos
- Treaties of Latvia
- Treaties of Lebanon
- Treaties of Lesotho
- Treaties of Liberia
- Treaties of Liechtenstein
- Treaties of Lithuania
- Treaties of Luxembourg
- Treaties of Madagascar
- Treaties of Malaysia
- Treaties of Mali
- Treaties of Malta
- Treaties of the Marshall Islands
- Treaties of Mauritania
- Treaties of Mauritius
- Treaties of Mexico
- Treaties of Monaco
- Treaties of Mongolia
- Treaties of Montenegro
- Treaties of Morocco
- Treaties of Mozambique
- Treaties of Nepal
- Treaties of the Netherlands
- Treaties of New Zealand
- Treaties of Nicaragua
- Treaties of Niger
- Treaties of Nigeria
- Treaties of Norway
- Treaties of Oman
- Treaties of Pakistan
- Treaties of the State of Palestine
- Treaties of Panama
- Treaties of Papua New Guinea
- Treaties of Paraguay
- Treaties of Peru
- Treaties of the Philippines
- Treaties of the Polish People's Republic
- Treaties of Portugal
- Treaties of Qatar
- Treaties of South Korea
- Treaties of Moldova
- Treaties of the Socialist Republic of Romania
- Treaties of the Soviet Union
- Treaties of Rwanda
- Treaties of San Marino
- Treaties of São Tomé and Príncipe
- Treaties of Saudi Arabia
- Treaties of Senegal
- Treaties of Serbia and Montenegro
- Treaties of Singapore
- Treaties of Slovakia
- Treaties of Slovenia
- Treaties of South Africa
- Treaties of Spain
- Treaties of the Dominion of Ceylon
- Treaties of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
- Treaties of Sweden
- Treaties of Switzerland
- Treaties of Tajikistan
- Treaties of Thailand
- Treaties of North Macedonia
- Treaties of Trinidad and Tobago
- Treaties of Tunisia
- Treaties of Turkey
- Treaties of Uganda
- Treaties of the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic
- Treaties of the United Arab Emirates
- Treaties of the United Arab Republic
- Treaties of the United Kingdom
- Treaties of Tanzania
- Treaties of the United States
- Treaties of Uruguay
- Treaties of Uzbekistan
- Treaties of Venezuela
- Treaties of Vietnam
- Treaties of Yugoslavia
- Treaties of Zambia
- Treaties of Zimbabwe
- 1958 in New York (state)
- Treaties extended to Greenland
- Treaties extended to the Faroe Islands
- Treaties extended to the Netherlands Antilles
- Treaties extended to Gibraltar
- Treaties extended to the Isle of Man
- Treaties extended to Bermuda
- Treaties extended to the Cayman Islands
- Treaties extended to Guernsey
- Treaties extended to Jersey
- Treaties extended to Ashmore and Cartier Islands
- Treaties extended to the Australian Antarctic Territory
- Treaties extended to Christmas Island
- Treaties extended to the Cocos (Keeling) Islands
- Treaties extended to Heard Island and McDonald Islands
- Treaties extended to Norfolk Island
- Treaties extended to the Coral Sea Islands
- Treaties extended to Surinam (Dutch colony)
- Treaties extended to British Hong Kong
- Treaties extended to British Honduras
- Treaties extended to Macau
- Treaties extended to Aruba
- Treaties extended to French Algeria
- Treaties extended to French Comoros
- Treaties extended to French Somaliland
- Treaties extended to French Guiana
- Treaties extended to French Polynesia
- Treaties extended to the French Southern and Antarctic Lands
- Treaties extended to Guadeloupe
- Treaties extended to Martinique
- Treaties extended to Mayotte
- Treaties extended to New Caledonia
- Treaties extended to Réunion
- Treaties extended to Saint Pierre and Miquelon
- Treaties extended to Wallis and Futuna
- Treaties extended to American Samoa
- Treaties extended to Baker Island
- Treaties extended to Guam
- Treaties extended to Howland Island
- Treaties extended to Jarvis Island
- Treaties extended to Johnston Atoll
- Treaties extended to Midway Atoll
- Treaties extended to Navassa Island
- Treaties extended to the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands
- Treaties extended to the Panama Canal Zone
- Treaties extended to Palmyra Atoll
- Treaties extended to Puerto Rico
- Treaties extended to the United States Virgin Islands
- Treaties extended to Wake Island
- Treaties extended to West Berlin
- Treaties extended to the British Virgin Islands