Judicial Assistance by German Courts in Aid of International Arbitration - Chapter 06 - International Arbitration and the Courts
Author(s):
Reinmar Wolff
Page Count:
36 pages
Media Description:
1 PDF Download
Published:
September, 2015
Description:
Originally from International Arbitration and the Courts
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I. INTRODUCTION: CHALLENGES OF ACCESSING
EVIDENCE ABROAD
Unavailability of evidence is an issue every practitioner is only too
familiar with: Frequently the client’s only knowledgeable employees
have left the firm by the time the proceedings are initiated and have
taken their knowledge with them, or documents remain nowhere to be
found or have never been in the possession of the client, but are at the
disposal of a third party.
Winning or losing a case may then depend on whether the witnesses
can and will effectively be forced to give testimony or whether those
in possession of the documents can actually be forced to release them
as evidence. It is then crucial that coercive powers vis-à-vis an
unwilling witness be at the forum’s disposal and that it be prepared
to execute them. The failure to meet either of these prerequisites,
leading to the unavailability of evidence, can be tantamount to its nonexistence.
Due to their purely contractual nature and unlike state courts,
arbitral tribunals lack coercive power to enforce procedural decisions
on the taking of evidence. For the purpose of issuing orders for the
production of particular documents, summoning witnesses and similar
measures, tribunals and parties therefore must rely on state courts.
Most national arbitration laws are straightforward in providing such
judicial assistance in the domestic field. In sharp contrast, accessing
evidence abroad is usually highly complicated and may delay the
proceedings substantially.1 This obstacle especially affects
international arbitration since the seat of the tribunal is often chosen in
light of its neutrality so that evidence frequently is located abroad.2
German law, however, paves the way for the German courts to provide
assistance to international arbitral tribunals as well. This relatively
generous and arbitration-friendly offer to the international arbitration
community has to date not received sufficient attention.3 Before
addressing the particularities of this German approach (below Sections III
to V), it is useful to elucidate how other jurisdictions deal with judicial
assistance in aid of international arbitration (below Section II).
II. COMMON APPROACHES: AN INTERNATIONAL
COMPARISON
A. Potential Approaches
Judicial assistance supporting international arbitration can generally
assume two separate forms: (1) support mediated by additional bodies,
especially the state courts at the seat of the arbitration and (2) the
tribunal’s direct access to the supporting court. The first approach is
broadly available by invoking the Hague Evidence Convention.4 Under
Article 1 of the Convention, judicial authorities of one state may request
the competent authority of another state, by means of a letter of request,
to obtain evidence for use in judicial proceedings or to perform some
other judicial act. For this purpose, Article 2 of the Convention provides
that each contracting state designate a central authority which undertakes
to receive letters of request and to transmit them to the authority
competent to execute them. According to Article 12 of the Convention,
the execution of a letter of request may be refused only for two narrowly
defined grounds: lack of judicial authority and prejudice of sovereignty
or security. Since arbitral tribunals are not judicial authorities of a state
and arbitral proceedings are not judicial proceedings, it is widely
acknowledged that arbitral tribunals are not entitled to directly issue
letters of request under the Hague Evidence Convention.5 However,
most national arbitration laws entitle domestic arbitral tribunals to ask
the state courts for judicial assistance including the issuance of letters of
request under the Hague Evidence Convention.6 Since the original
request is necessarily mediated twice – by a state court and by the central
authority – the process is not only complicated and time-consuming,7 but
the arbitral tribunal is also likely to lose control of the request.8 Given
the arbitral tribunal is also likely to lose control of the request.8 Given