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Leading international law firm Herbert Smith Freehills has succeeded in a landmark case on escalation clauses in arbitration agreements before the Hong Kong Court of Appeal that will have significant consequences and could deliver cost savings for commercial contract disputes globally.

Many commercial contracts contain "escalation clauses" – which require negotiation or mediation before either party can begin formal proceedings.  These clauses are intended to promote the efficient resolution of disputes, but often lead to costly litigation. 

Where the dispute is ultimately referred to arbitration, an argument about compliance with the escalation mechanism can derail proceedings, leaving any decision of the arbitrators vulnerable to challenge in the courts. 

Earlier today (7 June), the Court of Appeal in Hong Kong resolved this issue by finding that any dispute about escalation clauses should be resolved by the arbitrators chosen by the parties, not the courts. 

In other words, the arbitration tribunal's findings on this issue will be final and binding and cannot be used as a basis to challenge the award.

Simon Chapman QC, Herbert Smith Freehills Asia head of disputes, appeared as advocate before the Court of Appeal and at First Instance, and commented:

"This is a hugely significant ruling, with important practical consequences around the world.  Hong Kong is a model law jurisdiction, with arbitration legislation similar to that adopted in over 100 other jurisdictions. 

"Today's ruling is the highest authority on this point in any model law jurisdiction, so commercial parties around the world can now have confidence that their arbitration agreements will be upheld, even if there are questions about compliance with contractual pre-conditions to arbitration.

"The international significance of this case is also reflected by the body of case law and academic writing from across the world cited in the judgment, including authorities from the United States, Australia, England & Wales, and Singapore, as well as prior rulings from the Hong Kong courts." 

A full copy of the judgment has been uploaded to the Hong Kong judiciary website and can be found here

For more details on the history and background to the case, read the full articles on our Arbitration blog or Asia Disputes blog

 

What does this mean in practical terms?

There are three key takeaways from today's ruling:

  1. An allegation that a party has failed to comply with a pre-condition to arbitration should not prevent the case from moving forward. Ultimately, it will be for the arbitrators to determine whether the clause has been complied with and, if not, what the consequences of that should be.  The tribunal still retains jurisdiction to hear the dispute, and so any award cannot subsequently be challenged before the courts on this point.  This brings much greater certainty (and finality) to the process, and should avoid costly and protracted litigation.
     
  2. This does not mean that escalation clauses are not enforceable. Arbitral tribunals can take many different steps to ensure that escalation clauses are respected.  They can, for example, decline to hear a dispute until the parties have complied with the contract.  They can adjourn proceedings to allow negotiation or mediation to take place.  They can impose cost sanctions on the party that has breached the escalation provision.  Or they can proceed to hear the dispute regardless, on the basis that compliance with the clause was likely to be futile.  The key point is that, now, these are questions for the arbitrators alone to decide, and whatever decision they make should not lead to further review by the courts.
     
  3. There may be certain (limited) exceptions to this rule.  Although today's ruling will apply to the vast majority of escalation clauses, the Court of Appeal made clear that in each case the question is to be answered by ascertaining the intention of the parties.  There may be extreme circumstances where the contract makes clear that failure to follow the escalation mechanism will have jurisdictional consequences.  For example, a contract could in theory stipulate that, before any dispute is to be referred to arbitration, the parties must negotiate in good faith for a period of 30 days, and that any subsequent arbitral tribunal will lack jurisdiction to hear the case unless these provisions are strictly met.  Such drafting is exceptionally rare, however, and would not be recommended (indeed, it would create a recipe for precisely the sort of costly litigation that today's Court of Appeal ruling is designed to prevent).

Key contacts

Simon Chapman KC photo

Simon Chapman KC

Regional Head of Practice - Dispute Resolution, Asia, Hong Kong

Simon Chapman KC
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Jojo Fan

Partner, Hong Kong

Jojo Fan
Kathryn Sanger photo

Kathryn Sanger

Partner,

Kathryn Sanger
May Tai photo

May Tai

Consultant, Hong Kong

May Tai

Media contact

For further information on this article please contact

Sally Greig

Head of Communications, Asia

Hong Kong