NYP 13

  1. ARBITRATION

    1) Must an arbitrator follow the substantive law or the rules of evidence?
    2) What is the scope of judicial review?
    1 NEED NOT FOLLOW the substantive law or rules of evidence. They do justice as they see fit.

    2 J/R IS NARROW—limited to deciding whether arbitration can be avoided or must be compelled, and whether an award can be vacated on grounds of corruption, fraud, misconduct, significant bias, or abuse of power.
  2. ARBITRATION

    What are the 5 ways to avoid arbitration?
    • Is there an AGREEMENT to arbitrate?
    • Is dispute within SCOPE of the arbitration clause?
    • Is the arbitration clause VALID? (presumption of validity, except where fraud, duress, or coercion can be proved)
    • Express CONDITIONS PRECEDENT satisfied?
    • STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS?
  3. ARBITRATION

    1) How do you compel arbitration?
    2) How you yo avoid it where you're served a "notice of intention to arbitrate"?
    1) MOTION for stay of action and to compel arbitration

    2) COMMENCE SPECIAL PROCEEDING for a stay of arbitration (raise the 5 defenses) within 20 DAYS from receipt of notice of intention to arbitrate
  4. ARBITRATION

    What are the ONLY circumstances where a court VACATE an arbitration award?
    • Corruption, fraud, or misconduct during arbitration proceeding
    • Significant partiality or bias of arbitrator
    • Arbitrator exceeded scope of power (usually a losing argument, because they may do justice as they see fit)
  5. OTHER FORMS OF ADR

    What are they? (hint: 3 of them)
    1) MEDIATION—neutral, non-binding, facilitate settlement, separate talks, then combined talks

    2) NEUTRAL EVALUATION—neutral expert in subject matter receives condensed presentation of issues, and predicts how a court would decide

    3) SUMMARY JURY TRIAL—condensed version of a real trial, involving a real judge and jury. Typically limited to one day.
Author
paul
ID
23334
Card Set
NYP 13
Description
NYP 13 - Arbitration
Updated