Skip to main content

Arbitration

List of Arbitrators

  • International Arbitrators

    Erick BOYADJIAN - Lawyer, Toulouse Bar Association


    Vassilka CLIQUET - Lawyer, Bordeaux Bar Association


    Juan-Pablo CORREA - Lawyer, Barcelona Bar Association


    Dmitry DAVYDENKO - Law Professor, Belarusian State University


    Michel DUBLANCHE - Lawyer, Toulouse Bar Association


    Patrice GRIEUMARD - Lawyer, Toulouse Bar Association


    Catherine GRYNFOGEL - Senior Lecturer, Toulouse Capitole University


    Moussa JELLOULI - Chartered Accountant, President of COFIGEX, Casablanca


    Edouard JUNG, Lawyer - Toulouse Bar Association


    Hugues KENFACK - President and Law Professor, Toulouse Capitole University


    Christophe KREMER - Lawyer, Toulouse Bar Association


    Amel MAKHLOUF - Lawyer, Paris Bar Association, PhD in Law


    Abdelmadjid NEDJARI - Lawyer, Toulouse Bar Association, PhD in Law


    Lukas RASS-MASSON - Law Professor, Toulouse Capitole University


    Claire SAINT-JEVIN - Lawyer, Bordeaux Bar Association


    Laurent-Fabrice ZENGUE - Legal Practitioner

  • All Arbitrators

    Find more arbitrators here.  

Read more …List of Arbitrators

Arbitration forms

Form to file in for Request for Arbitration (ordinary procedure, simplified procedure, arbitration-expertise or mediation-arbitration): Download

Form to file in for Answer to Request for ArbitrationDownload

Form to file in for Request of Emergency Arbitration: Download 

 

Arbitration in a nutshell

Arbitration

In choosing arbitration, the parties opt for a private dispute resolution procedure instead of going to court. If there is no official definition for arbitration, we can note what its principal characteristics are.

Arbitration is a form of alternative dispute resolution. Most arbitration is driven by a pre-dispute contract entered into by the parties, in which they agree that if a dispute should arise, it will never get into the court system. Instead, the parties decide to submit the dispute to one or more arbitrators who make a binding decision on the dispute. Arbitration is consensual, it can only take place if both parties have agreed to it.

Arbitration is a confidential procedure: hearings are conducted in private and awards are not published, unless parties have expressly agreed to its publication.

Arbitration is neutral. Parties are able to choose such important elements as the applicable law, language, and place of the arbitration.

Due to the flexibility and finality of arbitration proceedings, resolving disputes through arbitration may often be quicker and cheaper than resolution through court litigation or other means of dispute resolution. Arbitration allows the parties to choose their own tribunal, often chosen according to the arbitrators’ degree of expertise.

The decision of the Arbitral Tribunal is final and easy to enforce. Unless otherwise agreed, the decision is legally binding and non-appealable, except in extremely limited circumstances, such as in the case of fraud or collusion on the part of the arbitrator. If a party refuses to enforce the award, the other party may appeal to the public power of the State. In this case, the party will have to request the exequatur of the award before national courts.

International Arbitration

International arbitration is to be distinguished from arbitration at national levels, as the latter is necessarily different according to each national law.

This form of alternative dispute resolution is especially used for the resolution of commercial disputes, particularly in the context of international commercial transactions. With its simple procedures, confidentiality and neutrality, as well as its procedural flexibility, arbitration offers consequent advantages in terms of time and cost-efficiency. Its international success is really based on the efficiency of the procedure (compared to more classic judicial proceedings) and the balance between its private aspect, which allows its flexibility, and its public aspect, which allows its effectiveness.

International arbitration allows parties from different jurisdictions, often from different cultural and linguistic origins, to solve disputes in a final and binding manner, without the formalities of the procedural rules of their own legal systems. International arbitration clauses, as well as the arbitral awards, are therefore necessarily internationally recognised in order to be able to be enforced throughout the world.

International arbitration is therefore the main form of international dispute resolution.

CMCAO's Arbitration Clause

It is recommended that parties wishing to make reference to the Chamber in their contracts use the standard clause below:


  1. All disputes arising out of or in connection with the present contract, in particular, any question relating to its existence, negotiation, validity or termination of this contract, shall be finally settled through arbitration, under the Rules of arbitration of the Chamber of Mediation, Conciliation, and Arbitration of Occitanie (CMCAO) in its [date of Rules] version.
  2. The number of arbitrators shall be [indicate number].
  3. The legal place of arbitration shall be at the Secretariat of the Chamber, at 10 Boulevard d’Arcole – 31000 TOULOUSE
  4. The language to be used in the arbitration proceedings shall be French.
  5. The award shall be rendered at law and the governing law of the contract shall be the substantive law of […].

If parties wish to exclude the application of one of the Chamber’s procedures they must expressly opt out by adding the following wording to the clause above: 

(a) The Expedited Procedure provisions shall not apply; or

(b) The Emergency Arbitration Procedure provisions shall not apply. 

If parties wish for the award to not be published, they must expressly add the following wording to the clause above: 

All disputes arising out of or in connection with the present contract shall be finally settled under the Rules of arbitration of the Chamber of Mediation, Conciliation, and Arbitration of Occitanie by one or more arbitrators appointed in accordance with said Rules. No award or procedural order made in the arbitration shall be published. 

Parties shall clearly and precisely draft the arbitration clause to avoid any risk of ambiguity or unclear wording that will cause uncertainty and delay and can hinder or even compromise the dispute resolution process.  

Parties are free to adapt the clause to their particular circumstances. The Chamber’s Rules of arbitration do not limit the parties’ free choice of the place and language of the arbitration or the law governing the contract.