Incorporating Arbitration Clauses: The Sacrifice of Consistency at the Altar of Experience

This article considers the varying judicial approaches to the question of incorporation of arbitration agreements by reference to another contract, schedule of terms, or trading rules. In particular, attention is directed to the approach taken by English courts in considering whether a subsequent ho...

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Main Authors: Allison, Simon, Dharmananda SC, Kanaga
Format: Journal Article
Published: Kluwer Law International 2014
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/93985
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author Allison, Simon
Dharmananda SC, Kanaga
author_facet Allison, Simon
Dharmananda SC, Kanaga
author_sort Allison, Simon
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description This article considers the varying judicial approaches to the question of incorporation of arbitration agreements by reference to another contract, schedule of terms, or trading rules. In particular, attention is directed to the approach taken by English courts in considering whether a subsequent holder of a bill of lading is bound by an arbitration agreement contained in a charterparty. In that context, English courts required an express reference in a bill of lading to the charterparty arbitration clause before it could be regarded as part of the contract. General words purporting to incorporate the terms and conditions of a charterparty would not be sufficient. This article examines the development of this strict approach to incorporation in the maritime context, its application to contractual disputes outside that context and recent case law signalling a more flexible approach to the question based on the intention of the parties involved.
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publishDate 2014
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-939852024-01-19T06:24:40Z Incorporating Arbitration Clauses: The Sacrifice of Consistency at the Altar of Experience Allison, Simon Dharmananda SC, Kanaga This article considers the varying judicial approaches to the question of incorporation of arbitration agreements by reference to another contract, schedule of terms, or trading rules. In particular, attention is directed to the approach taken by English courts in considering whether a subsequent holder of a bill of lading is bound by an arbitration agreement contained in a charterparty. In that context, English courts required an express reference in a bill of lading to the charterparty arbitration clause before it could be regarded as part of the contract. General words purporting to incorporate the terms and conditions of a charterparty would not be sufficient. This article examines the development of this strict approach to incorporation in the maritime context, its application to contractual disputes outside that context and recent case law signalling a more flexible approach to the question based on the intention of the parties involved. 2014 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/93985 10.1093/arbitration/30.2.265 Kluwer Law International restricted
spellingShingle Allison, Simon
Dharmananda SC, Kanaga
Incorporating Arbitration Clauses: The Sacrifice of Consistency at the Altar of Experience
title Incorporating Arbitration Clauses: The Sacrifice of Consistency at the Altar of Experience
title_full Incorporating Arbitration Clauses: The Sacrifice of Consistency at the Altar of Experience
title_fullStr Incorporating Arbitration Clauses: The Sacrifice of Consistency at the Altar of Experience
title_full_unstemmed Incorporating Arbitration Clauses: The Sacrifice of Consistency at the Altar of Experience
title_short Incorporating Arbitration Clauses: The Sacrifice of Consistency at the Altar of Experience
title_sort incorporating arbitration clauses: the sacrifice of consistency at the altar of experience
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/93985