“Soft Law” and Hard Questions: ASA’s Initiative in the Debate on Counsel Ethics in International Arbitration - Chapter 02 - Sense and Non-sense of Guidelines, Rules and Other Para-regulatory Texts in International Arbitration - ASA Special Series No. 37
Author(s):
Elliott Geisinger
Page Count:
16 pages
Media Description:
1 PDF Download
Published:
October, 2015
Description:
Originally from Sense and Non-sense of Guidelines, Rules and Other Para-regulatory Texts in International Arbitration - ASA Special Series No. 37
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1. INTRODUCTION
In April 2014, the Swiss Arbitration Association (“ASA”) made
public its Position Paper on the IBA Guidelines on Party
Representation in International Arbitration (the “IBA Guidelines”).
ASA’s Position Paper is reproduced in this ASA Special Series so that
there is no need to go into its details. In the meantime, the London
Court of International Arbitration (the “LCIA”) decided to address
some of the issues covered by the IBA Guidelines in an Annex to the
new LCIA Arbitration Rules that came into force on 1 October 2014.1 In
the arbitration community, both the IBA Guidelines and the Annex to
the LCIA Rules have received a mixed reaction, ranging from
unqualified approval to vehement opposition. The article by Dr. Felix
Dasser on the IBA Guidelines that is also included in this ASA Special
Series provides a panorama of commentary on the IBA Guidelines, and
adopts a critical stance.
Several ASA Board members and the author of this contribution
have given considerable further thought to the issues raised by the IBA
Guidelines and by the LCIA’s approach. The thought process has led
to three main considerations. First, whilst the current debate is
frequently labelled as a debate on counsel ethics, closer scrutiny shows
that it encompasses much broader issues. Many of the proposed
remedies have little to do with ethical matters, and are actually already
addressed in existing rules or principles. This first consideration means
that it is necessary to so some intellectual sorting and to identify better
what is really a question of ethics and what is not. This also narrows
down the debate on what should be done to tackle issues that truly
pertain to ethics. Second, to the extent that the debate does concern
ethics, the IBA Guidelines and the new LCIA Rules share a common
feature: the application and enforcement of the rules or guidelines
applying to counsel ethics is put in the hands of the arbitral tribunal.
This is, in the author’s modest view, the worst of all solutions, and this
contribution will briefly set out the reasons for this opinion. Third, the
considerable excitement caused by the debate on counsel ethics carries
a risk of a “me too” approach, with various entities and institutions
adopting their own rules or guidelines—thereby defeating the very
purpose of self-regulation. The second and the third considerations
have led the author of this contribution to imagine (some would say
daydream of) a solution that would both relieve arbitrators of an
unwelcome and potentially poisonous task and provide a truly global
solution to a global problem. This is ASA’s initiative calling for a
“Global Arbitration Ethics Council”.2
2. THE NEED TO SORT ISSUES
Gary Born has famously referred to the status of counsel ethics in
international arbitration as being more a “teenager’s bedroom” than an
ethical no-man’s land.3 The remark is highly apposite and actually
applies to some of the proposals for regulation. It is striking that many
of the issues raised are already regulated, in a different context.
2.1 Counsel Ethics and Independence and Impartiality of
Arbitrators
Take for example the question of instructing counsel to create a
potential conflict of interest for one or several members of the arbitral
tribunal. This concern arose from the famous Hvrtska Elektroprivreda,
d.d. v. Republic of Slovenia matter in which the last-minute (and
unannounced) participation of a Barrister from the same Chambers as
one of the arbitrators raised issues of independence and impartiality
for that arbitrator.4 Guideline 5 of the IBA Guidelines addresses this
issue by stating that counsel should not accept instructions where this
can create an issue of conflict of interest for an arbitrator. Guideline 6
can create an issue of conflict of interest for an arbitrator. Guideline 6