New International Evidence Rules
Advance Arbitration Process
The International Bar Association's new "Rules on
the Taking of Evidence in International Commerical Arbitration"
address how evidence is collected and presented in international
arbitration proceedings. The rules reflect how arbitration is
practiced today, pave the way toward harmonizing differing legal
cultures, and delocalize business-based legal proceedings worldwide.
by Terry F. Peppard
rbitration
daily assumes an ever larger role in resolving
legal disputes the world over. The trend is driven by concerns
over economic and temporal costs, and by considerations of privacy,
informality, and flexibility, and, particularly in the context
of valuable business relationships, the desire, where possible,
to maintain them.
The London-based International Bar Association (IBA) recently
took a significant step toward making disparate legal cultures
more hospitable to businesses and their legal advisers by revising,
for the first time since their initial release in 1983, its rules
of evidence for international commercial arbitration. The IBA
is the world's largest membership-based legal organization,
with nearly 175 member bar associations and legal societies and
about 18,000 individual members.
The new rules, called the "IBA Rules on the Taking of
Evidence in International Commercial Arbitration," address
the collection and presentation of evidence in international
arbitration proceedings. As importantly, they reflect the way
arbitration is practiced today1 and
promise to pave the way for further efforts toward harmonizing
differing legal regimes and "delocalizing"2
business-based legal proceedings worldwide.
This article discusses the new rules' important implications
for Wisconsin business lawyers, litigators, international law
practitioners, and arbitrators.
Avoiding the Home Court Advantage
The appeal of arbitration in international settings is enhanced
by the perception that it's almost always best for a party
from one country not to take a dispute with a business partner
from another country into the latter's national court system.
The fear is that each country's courts exhibit their own
cultural and legal biases, so that the foreign party
who submits to such a system risks falling victim to a "home
court advantage."
The solution for international businesses and their legal
advisers has long been to write a predispute arbitration clause
into contracts with foreign business partners. This tendency
has become so strong that perhaps 80 percent of all international
business agreements in force today contain such a clause.
Answering One Question, Raising Others
Of course, choosing arbitration does not answer all questions.
Indeed it raises others, including selection of the rules by
which the arbitral proceedings will be conducted. This question
has been addressed most often either by resort to an institutional
approach to arbitral administration under systems sponsored by
such organizations as the American Arbitration Association,3 or instead by reliance on a set of ad
hoc rules like those sanctioned by the United Nations Commission
on International Trade Law (the UNCITRAL Rules).
Whichever of these paths is chosen, however, it remains a
challenge for lawyers involved in the arbitration of international
commercial disputes to reconcile the methods and perspectives
of diverse legal cultures at the point of collecting and presenting
evidence for a trial-type hearing, a domain largely left open
in the most frequently employed institutional and ad hoc systems.4
A Clash of Legal Cultures
The clash of arbitral legal cultures has been played out most
prominently between the common law practices of jurisdictions
like the United States and the United Kingdom, on the one hand,
and the civil code approaches of France and most other countries
on the European continent.
The issues thus exposed range across the spectrum of pre-hearing
and hearing procedure. Among them: What is the role of the parties'
pleadings? May discovery depositions be taken? Should witnesses
testify under oath? May witnesses be crossexamined by counsel?
Perhaps not surprisingly, the common law and civil code disciplines
have long had separate answers to these and other fundamental
questions of arbitration practice.
For civil code adherents, the emphasis has been on detailed
written submissions rather than the spare notice pleadings and
extensive oral presentations prevalent in common law regimes.
Likewise, civil code proceedings have been characterized by the
relative absence of American-style discovery. And advocates in
civil code settings have shied away from the swearing of witnesses
and been uncomfortable with the aggressive cross-examination
prevalent in common law jurisdictions.
An Early Solution: The 1983 IBA Rules
Realizing the difficulties presented by this clash of cultures,
the IBA sought in 1983 to bridge the gap between them with its
publication of "Supplementary Rules Governing the Presentation
and Reception of Evidence in International Commercial Arbitration."5
Perhaps consistent with their status as a first effort at
"harmonization" of international arbitration practice
methods, the 1983 rules were very brief, containing only seven
short articles. They also were quite general in their terms,
leaving to the discretion of the appointed arbitrator(s) some
of the most troubling issues that might arise either before or
at a hearing on the merits.
Nonetheless, the 1983 rules broke ground. Among other things,
they opted for extensive speaking pleadings over their notice
counterparts.6 They also limited discovery
to the production of documents relied upon by each party and
the unsworn written statements of each side's own witnesses.7 Moreover, they did not require witnesses
at hearing to be sworn.8 These were
important concessions to the civil code tradition.
Balancing these provisions, the 1983 rules permitted cross-examination
of witnesses essentially on the common law model.9
They also provided that a party might be heard in support of
his own case,10 a practice not permitted
in some civil code traditions. And, in a concession to American
practice, they allowed pre-hearing interviews of witnesses,11 a procedure not then followed in Britain.
To encourage the widest possible acceptance of the 1983 rules,
the rules allowed the parties to an international commercial
arbitration to adopt them in whole or in part, or with modifications,
to meet the peculiar needs of any case.12
Working Party Revisions
The 1983 IBA rules have been used and cited only sparingly
over the 16 years since their adoption. In the meanwhile, much
has happened in the world of dispute resolution, and especially
in international commercial arbitration. So it was not surprising
that the IBA, working through its Business Law Section and the
section's Committee on Arbitration and ADR, recently commissioned
a "working party" to recommend revisions to the rules
to reflect current practice. The membership of the working party
was drawn from the committee's approximately 1,500 members
in 115 countries.13
The working party, composed of 16 section members, represented
nine almost exclusively European legal systems. France, with
four members of the working party, had particularly strong representation.
The common law tradition was represented by one member from the
U.S. and two from the U.K. Only one member of the working party,
one from formerly British Hong Kong, arguably represented a non-European
tradition.14
Still the working party has been credited with producing in
the new rules "a reliable guide to international norms of
procedural fairness."15
Coming of Age: The New IBA Rules
The 1999 rules, which may be identified simply as the "IBA
Rules of Evidence," are intended to replace entirely their
1983 predecessors.16 And, like the
1983 rules, the new rules are designed to be used in conjunction
with either institutional or ad hoc rules of arbitration procedure,
and may be employed in whole or in part or with modifications.17 The new rules were adopted, in nine
detailed articles, by resolution of the IBA Council at its meeting
in Boston on June 1, 1999.
Arbitration Pleadings Under the New Rules
Unlike the 1983 rules, the new rules are silent on the topic
of arbitration pleadings. The IBA thus has left this subject
to be governed by the institutional and ad hoc rules that the
evidence rules are intended to supplement.18
One implication of this choice is that the longstanding importance
of detailed pleadings and of full documentation of arbitration
claims at the point of pleadings is intended to remain.
Limits of Discovery
As regards pre-hearing discovery, the Preamble to the 1999
rules recites that an underlying premise of the drafters is that:
"The taking of evidence shall be conducted on the principle
that each Party shall be entitled to know, reasonably in advance
of any Evidentiary Hearing, the evidence on which the other Party
relies."19
Because no mention is made in this proviso of evidence on
which an inquiring party might wish to rely, it stands as an
implicit rejection of the expansive American approach to pre-hearing
discovery, a carryover from the 1983 rules.20
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