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3 Int'l. In-House Counsel J. 1355 (2009-2010)
A View from an International Arbitration Customer: In Dire Need of Early Resolution

handle is hein.journals/iihcj3 and id is 11 raw text is: 



International In-house Counsel  Journal
Vol. 2, No. 8, Summer 2009,  1355-1364




         The  View   From an International Arbitration Customer:
                       In Dire  Need   of Early   Resolution


             MICHAEL MCILWRATH AND ROLAND SCHROEDER
                               Legal Counsel,  GE, UK


Michael  McIlwrath  and Roland  Schroeder 'The View  from  an International Arbitration
Customer:  In Dire Need of Early Resolution' (2008) 74 Arbitration 3-11.
1.   INTRODUCTION
In-house lawyers live in a world where every day the practice of law directly interfaces
with the operation of a business. Within this world, the focus is not just on winning but
on advancing  the overall commercial needs and objectives. If the company prevails in a
dispute but the commercial goals are not advanced - and  advanced in a timely fashion -
then we have still fallen short in the eyes of the business. The same lesson applies to our
outside counsel  and  to the institutions who oversee  the arbitration process.  As  a
consequence,  we  believe  that international arbitration institutions and professionals
should be more  mindful of the goals and objectives of businesses that are the customers
of dispute resolution services.
Any  business lawyer knows   that even the most complex  disputes usually boil down to
one or two critical issues that, once decided, will either determine the lion's share of the
dispute or encourage the parties to settle. And yet, the experience of many companies,
including our own, is that tribunals in international commercial arbitrations, whether out
of a concern for due process or other reasons, are rarely willing to grant such relief in the
early stages of a proceeding when doing  so would have  the greatest impact and benefit
for the parties.' We believe there is no denying the gap that exists today between the time
generally taken  in arbitration to reach decisions  and  the needs  and  objectives of
businesses to assess exposure quickly and resolve disputes expeditiously.
General  Electric is a large transnational company  spanning the breadth  of industrial
activities and financial services. Although the company's corporate headquarters are in
the  USA,  it has  business division headquarters  and  operations  in many   different
countries. It takes steps wherever possible to avoid disputes or settle them early, but
recognises that a cost of doing business is that some disputes will not settle and will
require binding adjudication. That is to say, across the company and in the aggregate, we
have our fair share of international arbitration experience.
In October 2006, we  informally surveyed our litigation colleagues in the company on the
subject of early disposition of issues and gathered some war  stories of instances in
which  an early decision on a critical issue would have made a significant difference in the
business's general satisfaction with the international arbitration process. We will avoid
creating any suspense and give away  the ending to our story now: our colleagues were


  The substance of this article was initially conceived as a discussion note presented at a conference organized
by IAIParis on early disposition of issues in international arbitration. Our focus is limited to the practice of
international commercial arbitration, although we believe the views expressed are equally relevant to domestic
arbitration practice in many countries.


ISSN 1754-0607 print/ISSN 1754-0607 online


International In-house Counsel Journal

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